Fifty people died
in violence on Sunday in Xinjiang, Chinese state media said, in what police
called a "serious terrorist attack".
Earlier this week
state media reported the incident in Luntai county but gave the death toll as
two.
On Thursday a state
news portal said 40 "rioters", six civilians and four police officers
were killed. No reason was given for the delay in reporting.
Violence has been
escalating in Xinjiang in recent months.
The region in
China's far west is home to the Muslim Uighur minority group. Tensions exist
between the Uighur community and the Han Chinese.
'Extremist'
The regional
government's news portal, Tianshan, said that blasts occurred around 17:00 on
Sunday at two police stations, an outdoor market and a shop entrance.
The
"rioters" either blew themselves up or were shot dead by police, it
said. Fifty-four civilians were injured and two "rioters" were
captured, it said.
Tianshan named the
main suspect as Mamat Tursun, saying he "had been operating as an
extremist since 2003".
Confirming reports
about incidents in Xinjiang is difficult, because access is tightly controlled
and information flow restricted.
China blames
incidents on Uighur extremists inspired and supported by overseas terror
groups. Uighur activists say oppressive Chinese rule is fuelling anger and
violence in local communities.
There have been
high-profile, organised attacks on civilians in Kunming and Urumqi that have
left dozens of people dead.
There have been
other incidents of which less is known. In July violence left 96 people dead in
Xinjiang's Yarkant.
State media say it
was a "terror attack" but activists say police opened fire on people
protesting against a Ramadan crackdown on Muslims.
The latest incident
came as China tried Ilham Tohti, a prominent Uighur academic seen outside China
as a moderate voice who promoted dialogue between Beijing and the Uighurs.
He has since been
jailed for life for separatism, a verdict strongly condemned by the US.
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