The Chinese government blocked access to cellular service and internet sites Monday, the second day of deadly rioting between government forces and members of the ethnic Uighur minority in the northwest province of Xinjiang, according to Chinese state media.
The official Xinhua ne More..ws agency also reported that police have arrested 1,434 people in connection with the violence that left at least 156 dead. The agency didn't provide further details.
Protesters from the Uighur ethnic group took to the streets in the city of Kashgar in northwestern China on Monday, a day after a demonstration in Xinjiang's capital of Urumqi turned into a lethal riot.
A Uighur man in Kashgar said he was among more than 300 protesters who demonstrated outside the Id Kah Mosque late Monday afternoon, The Associated Press reported.
He said police surrounded them, and the two sides were yelling at each other, but there were no physical clashes.
Chinese state media said that along with the dead, 828 people have been injured in the riots.
The Uighurs — an ethnically Turkic, predominantly Muslim group — make up the majority in Xinjiang, a region in northwest China bordering Central Asia and Mongolia. Their relations have often been tense with the ethnic Han Chinese who predominate in the country as a whole. Many Uighurs feel they're discriminated against by the government in Beijing, and a Uighur separatist movement has existed for decades.
Alarmed by the reports of violence and deaths, Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon issued a statement Monday calling for restraint from both sides.
Exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer on Monday denied Chinese government accusations she helped incite the riots. Kadeer is the president of the Uighur American Association (UAA) and has lived in Fairfax, Va., since she was exiled from China in 2005.
In an interview, Kadeer says she only called her family in China to warn them to steer clear of upcoming protests that she heard about on Uighur and Chinese websites.
The protests started in the provincial capital of Urumqi on Sunday, when demonstrators gathered to demand justice for two Uighurs killed in June during a fight with their Han co-workers at a factory in southern China.
The protests turned into the deadliest ethnic unrest to hit the region in decades.
The official Xinhua ne More..ws agency also reported that police have arrested 1,434 people in connection with the violence that left at least 156 dead. The agency didn't provide further details.
Protesters from the Uighur ethnic group took to the streets in the city of Kashgar in northwestern China on Monday, a day after a demonstration in Xinjiang's capital of Urumqi turned into a lethal riot.
A Uighur man in Kashgar said he was among more than 300 protesters who demonstrated outside the Id Kah Mosque late Monday afternoon, The Associated Press reported.
He said police surrounded them, and the two sides were yelling at each other, but there were no physical clashes.
Chinese state media said that along with the dead, 828 people have been injured in the riots.
The Uighurs — an ethnically Turkic, predominantly Muslim group — make up the majority in Xinjiang, a region in northwest China bordering Central Asia and Mongolia. Their relations have often been tense with the ethnic Han Chinese who predominate in the country as a whole. Many Uighurs feel they're discriminated against by the government in Beijing, and a Uighur separatist movement has existed for decades.
Alarmed by the reports of violence and deaths, Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon issued a statement Monday calling for restraint from both sides.
Exiled Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer on Monday denied Chinese government accusations she helped incite the riots. Kadeer is the president of the Uighur American Association (UAA) and has lived in Fairfax, Va., since she was exiled from China in 2005.
In an interview, Kadeer says she only called her family in China to warn them to steer clear of upcoming protests that she heard about on Uighur and Chinese websites.
The protests started in the provincial capital of Urumqi on Sunday, when demonstrators gathered to demand justice for two Uighurs killed in June during a fight with their Han co-workers at a factory in southern China.
The protests turned into the deadliest ethnic unrest to hit the region in decades.
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