The Guardian
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At least one person was killed and eight injured in
a series of explosions outside a provincial Communist party office in central
China on Wednesday morning.
The blasts occurred at 7.40am outside of the Shanxi
Communist party committee offices in Taiyuan city, the provincial capital of
Shanxi, according to China's official newswire Xinhua.
"Judging by steel ball bearings scattered
throughout the scene, [police] suspect an improvised explosive device,"
Xinhua reported. "Right now the police have blocked off the scene and the
incident is under investigation."
The state broadcaster CCTV attributed the blasts to
seven bombs hidden in roadside flower displays. More than 20 vehicles were
damaged, CCTV reported. The motive for the attack was unclear.
"About 7.40 in the morning I heard some
explosions," said a witness surnamed Gao, who lives in a dormitory close
to the party offices. "At first I'd thought they were only firecrackers or
something until I heard a police whistle. I realised something was wrong and
immediately went downstairs to the scene.
"I saw blood stains on the ground, and an old
lady whose head was injured by flying debris – she was being rescued and sent
to the hospital. I also saw that the car windows in a nearby parking lot were
shattered."
An elderly man described the scene in a video posted
online. "I saw an iron ball flying from 300 to 400 metres away and hit an
old lady on the head," he said. "Look, look at the blood stain on the
ground. I saw seven blasts and three of them were continuous. The iron ball was
as big as a walnut. The old lady was accompanying her grandson to school and
got hit. Luckily the kid was fine."
Pictures posted online showed a column of smoke
rising in front of the building near a congested thoroughfare; others showed
one person sprawled in the middle of the road, which was lined with fire
engines.
China has been on high alert for violent attacks
since last week, when a sports utility vehicle ploughed through pedestrians in
Tiananmen Square, crashed into a marble bridge and exploded, killing five
people and injuring 40. Authorities labelled that incident a terrorist attack
and blamed the East Turkestan Islamic Movement, a shadowy group based in
Xinjiang, a north-western region of China.
In a handful of recent incidents, disgruntled
Chinese citizens have taken violent measures to avenge perceived mistreatment
by authorities. In July a wheelchair-bound man set off an explosive device at
the Beijing Capital international airport to protest against official treatment
of a decade-old case of police brutality.
In 2011 an unemployed farmer in Fuzhou, a city in
eastern Jiangxi province, blew himself up near government buildings to protest
at the confiscation of his land to build a highway. Three people were killed
including the farmer, and seven more were injured.
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