Massive parcel blasts in China: 7 killed, 51 hurt

Massive parcel blasts in China: 7 killed, 51 hurt

PTIUpdated: Friday, May 31, 2019, 10:07 PM IST
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Damaged windows are seen on the ground of a room at the site of blasts in Liucheng county in Liuzhou in south China's Guangxi province on September 30, 2015. Three people were killed on September 30 by multiple explosions in southern China, state media said, with local reports saying that the blasts occurred in 13 locations including government offices. CHINA OUT AFP PHOTO / STR |

Beijing : Seven people were killed and 51 others injured on Wednesday as 15 multiple parcel bomb explosions targeting government buildings in China’s remote southern Guangxi region sent shock waves across the country.

Official media gave few details of the blasts while photos flashed on social media showed extensive destruction to buildings and vehicles. The blasts occurred at the seat of Liucheng county and surrounding areas from 3:50 pm. The explosions were reported across 17 locations, including a shopping mall, prison, county government office, supermarket, transport station, hospital, staff dormitory of animal husbandry, vegetable market and disease control centre.

State-run Xinhua news agency reported that police have identified a 33-year-old man surnamed Wei, a native of Liucheng county, who is suspected to have caused the blasts but gave no other details. The Ministry of Public Security has sent criminal investigators to the scene. Local police, firefighters as well as work safety, housing and health authorities were rushed to the blast sites. Liucheng county public security political commissar Cai Tianlai told the media that a total of 60 suspicious courier parcels had been identified.

The parcels were placed under guard pending further processing by the bomb squad, Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported. Xinhua reported that 15 suspected letter bombs went off. Other reports said the explosives were packed in parcels sent to several areas.

Initial investigation showed that explosives could have been stuffed inside express delivery packages. Five people died on the spot while two died in hospital, Xinhua reported, while two others are missing. The blasts devastated Liucheng county and the surrounding areas. A 30-year-old witness Li Acheng from Dapu township who owns a fruit store just 350 metres away from a building that collapsed in one explosion told the Post that he initially he thought it was a terror attack.

“I was sitting inside the shop and a sudden loud bang was heard. Some windows in my shop broke, I walked outside to see what happened and almost got hit by a window falling from the third floor. I saw a half of a building nearby collapse,” Li said.

“We were all very shocked and thought it might be an act of terrorism. All shops were closed and the town is under curfew with police guard each street,” Li said. Li and his family left the town to a nearby village, fearing further attacks. “It was very scary with so many attacks in just over an hour,” he said.

Several local people reached out by news outlets over the phones said the sound of the explosions resembled mine blasts in remote mountains. Shocked local officials declined to speculate who was behind the blasts.

Pictures online showed a building half-collapsed in Dapu Township. Witnesses also saw vehicles damaged on the road. The blasts coincided with Martyrs Day observed today to commemorate those who laid down their lives fighting for national independence and during the revolution led by the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC) headed by Mao Zedong. While China has seen bomb attacks by disgruntled people in recent times, the scale of the today’s multiple bombings despite high security has shocked and surprised officials.

Officials suspect that a remote region may have been targeted considering that security was not as tight as in major cities across the country. All Chinese cities are under a thick blanket of security this year following a number of attacks by militants of East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM) which has been active in Xinjiang province where native Uyghur Muslims are restive over rising settlements of Han Chinese.

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