Advertisement

Compensation Figure Reveals Much Higher Death Toll in Xinjiang Uprising

By Wu Weilin and Luo Ya
Epoch Times Staff
Created: Jul 12, 2009 Last Updated: Jul 12, 2009
Print | E-mail to a friend | Give feedback
Related articles: China > Democracy and Human Rights

Four days after the crackdown, on July 10, Urumqi is still heavily guarded. This photo is taken at the Urumqi railway station. (AFP/Getty Images)

The Chinese regime recently announced special compensation plus funeral fees totaling 100 million yuan for ”the innocent dead” of the July 5 violence in Urumqi. With the maximum allowance of 200,000 yuan for one death, the 100 million yuan can cover at least 500 victims’ families, a number that far exceeded the previously released official death toll at 184.

According to a report by the regime’s mouthpiece, Xinhua News Agency, Urumqi Municipal Civil Bureau Director, Wang Fengyun said that Ministry of Civil Affairs will dispense special compensation fees—200,000 yuan for each death—plus 10,000 funeral fees for each innocent dead to the bereaved family.

Thus far, the first installment of 50 million yuan has been allocated. The total compensation is about 100 million yuan. Wang also indicated that government officials had met with 2,400 members of the victims’ families by the afternoon of July 10.

Based on the above released figures, the total “innocent dead,” according to the regime’s definition, could reach 500, and this figure still leaves room for people to speculate how many “non-innocent dead” there could be.

If it is assumed that there are four people in one bereaved family, the 2,400 members of victims’ families could translate to a death toll of 600 deaths. However, the regime has only admitted 184 deaths up to July 11.

Renowned China issue expert Chen Pokong believes the regime opened fire, judging from the official released 156 deaths and 1080 injured, which happened in a few hours.

Chen also commented that the regime was unusually efficient in handling the media, which included cutting off communication to the outside world during the night, quickly releasing official news such as death tolls, releasing videos and accusing that “foreign malicious force” plotted the uprising.

Many China experts also believe the regime was well prepared for this “Xinjiang Uprising,” and accused it of using the tragedy to instigate ethnic conflict in order to shift people’s resentment away from the regime’s corruption and inability to solve the current economic problem.

Read the original Chinese article


 

NTDTV Competitions 2009

In Focus

H1N1 Epidemic in China

John Liu and the United Front

Falun Gong: A Decade of Courage

Deng Yujiao - Rape and Resistance in China

World Falun Dafa Day

NTDTV Competitions

Learning Chinese

Eutelsat Blocks NTDTV in China

2008 Olympics: Coverage Behind the Scenes

CCP Incites Flushing Violence

China Sichuan Earthquake

Traditional Chinese Culture

Organ Harvesting in China

Gao Zhisheng

Repression in Tibet

Epoch Times Reporters Jailed in China

Quitting the Chinese Communist Party

China’s Transition to Democracy

Tainted Products from China

Twentieth Anniversary of the Tiananmen Square Massacre

Shen Yun Performing Arts

Books