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China censors news of an SUV plowing into a crowd in Tiananmen Square, killing five

JayAtl

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2013-10-28T102025Z_01_CB002_RTRIDSP_3_CHINA-TIANANMEN-6023.jpg
2013-10-28T102025Z_01_CB002_RTRIDSP_3_CHINA-TIANANMEN-6023.jpg
2013-10-28T102025Z_01_CB002_RTRIDSP_3_CHINA-TIANANMEN-6023.jpg


BEIJING — An SUV plowed into a crowd in Beijing’s iconic Tiananmen Square on Monday and then crashed and burst into flames, killing two pedestrians and the three occupants of the vehicle and injuring 38 others, police and state media said.

Police flooded the historic square, which is perhaps the country’s most sensitive and closely guarded public venue — as well as a major destination for domestic and foreign tourists. It was the scene of a bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protests in 1989

The cause or possible motive for the crash remained unclear. One foreign tourist interviewed by the Reuters news agency , who declined to give her name, reported hearing an explosion before seeing the smoke. Images posted on social media sites showed the vehicle engulfed in flames, and a thick plume of black smoke rising into the air.

Hundreds of posts about the incident surfaced on social media sites in China, but were quickly deleted by censors, according to FreeWeibo.com, a Web site that tracks such activity. Among the deleted posts were some that showed images of the burning vehicle and others that suggested the crash might have been a case of self-immolation, a widely used form of protest here.

Internet searches for “Tiananmen car accident” also were blocked. China’s state-owned news agency Xinhua carried a brief report of the crash, but reports and microblog posts by other Chinese media outlets were deleted. The incident was not mentioned on state television’s Chinese-language evening news.

The SUV burst through the security barriers lining the square before slamming into one of the stone bridges leading to the former imperial palace known as the Forbidden City, Beijing police said on their official microblog. The vehicle ignited not far from an imposing portrait of Mao Zedong, communist China’s founding father, which hangs from the ancient red-painted Tiananmen Gate.

One of the few Chinese newspapers attempting to report on the incident, the liberal Southern Metropolis Daily, interviewed a 23-year-old Filipino student who was hospitalized along with her father and sister. She said she did not know the condition of her mother, who had been with them.

The four were coming out of the Forbidden City when the car rushed toward them, said the student, who was identified by her first name, Francesca. “I heard the horn of the car, but it was too late before I realized it,” she told the newspaper, according to its Weibo blog account. “My mind went blank. When I came to, all of us were lying on the ground.”

The newspaper’s online report was later deleted. Qianlong.net, a news Web site run by the Beijing city government, said one person killed in the incident was a female tourist from the Philippines. But there was no way to verify whether that tourist was Francesca’s mother.

Mao’s regime built Tiananmen Square as a symbol of his power, and he proclaimed the founding of the People’s Republic of China from Tiananmen Gate in 1949. The country’s leaders still address crowds and watch parades from that spot on important national holidays.

The mausoleum that houses Mao’s embalmed body lies in the southern half of the square, while the Great Hall of the People, China’s parliament, sits on its western side. Not far to the west lies Zhongnanhai, the compound where many of China’s government leaders live and work.

The square retains an illustrious status for many Chinese, including those who want to protest against the government. In 2011, a protester set himself on fire in the square in an incident that was not reported by Chinese media. In 2009, three people whose car was pulled over by police on their way to the square set themselves on fire on a busy Beijing shopping street. In recent years, fire extinguishers have been placed throughout the square as a safety precaution.

A BBC news team was detained at the square for about 20 minutes after the incident, Asia bureau chief Jo Floto said. The channel’s cable broadcasts in China were blocked when they tried to air a report on it. Two journalists for the Agence France-Presse news agency were also briefly detained, and digital images were deleted from their equipment, the agency reported.

The metro station closest to Tiananmen Square was closed for more than three hours after the crash. Police also guarded Beijing Hospital, where many of the victims were taken. One officer was overheard asking hospital staff about the injured and whether any of the victims came from ethnic minority groups.

At least 122 Tibetans have set themselves on fire since February 2009 protesting against Chinese rule in their homeland, according to exile groups . But the tactic is not limited to that ethnic group.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world...8f7b88-3fc2-11e3-b028-de922d7a3f47_story.html
 
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If the News 'was' censored then how come we get to read about it here ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
 
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If the News 'was' censored then how come we get to read about it here ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
free world press has got it out and it is being censored to the chinese citizenry. do you ever bother reading the articles before posting even once in your history here? or you see china and immediately kowtow
 
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Stop the lies Yindumen. Global Times is a Chinese News Outfit.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/820978.shtml#.Um_SvfnFU8w

Tiananmen jeep crash kills 5, police name Xinjiang suspects
Global Times | 2013-10-29 1:38:01
By Jiang Jie and Liu Sha


349dd009-ca08-4fb1-b7ec-064ebd83e9f8.jpeg

Workers stand before a police barrier outside Tiananmen rostrum in Beijing on Monday after a jeep crashed into the crowd in Tiananmen Square and burst into flames, killing five and injuring 38, police said. Photo: AFP



Five people were killed and 38 injured after a jeep ploughed through crowds before it crashed and caught fire close to the Tiananmen rostrum in Beijing on Monday, local police said on its official Sina Weibo.

The driver and two passengers in the jeep were killed at the scene and another two tourists, a woman from the Philippines and a man from Guangdong Province in southern China, died of severe injuries, Beijing police said in a posting on its official microblog account.

Another 38 tourists and police officers, including a male and two female Filipinos and one Japanese man were also injured in the incident. The jeep crashed into a railing of the Jinshui Bridge outside the southern gate of the Forbidden City before bursting into flames at 12:05 pm, police said.

Two victims, who had been taken to Beijing Hospital, were still in a serious condition, a hospital staffer told the Global Times, but wished not to be identified.

Motor vehicles were seen returning to Chang'an Avenue, a major thoroughfare in Beijing, after the road was blocked off briefly by the police. Reporters from the Global Times witnessed police patrols at every 50 meters on the avenue.

"The vehicle ran very fast, I could hear people screaming all the way while the vehicle ploughed through the crowds," a female eyewitness at the scene, told the Global Times.

The tourist from Ningbo, Zhejiang Province, who goes by the name of Renqiao1220 on her Sina Weibo account, declined to give her real name to this newspaper but described the scene of the incident in detail.

She said that she suddenly saw a white SUV rushing into a crowd of visitors and then all the way towards the guardrail of Jinshui Bridge before it set aflame. She also said that she saw police cars chasing the SUV before it crashed.

"I heard the car's horn honking, but I noticed it too late. My mind went completely blank and when I woke again I was completely on the ground," the Guangzhou-based Nandu Daily quoted an injured Filipino woman called Francesca as saying.

Late on Monday, the police sent a notice to hotels in Beijing, in which hotel management were asked to look out for "suspicious guests" that had visited hotels since October 1. The police also sought information on "suspicious vehicles."

The police notice said that a "major case had taken place on Monday" and named two residents of Pishan county and Shanshan county of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region as likely suspects.

The police also described a light-colored SUV, and four license number plates, all starting with the regional character showing they were from Xinjiang, in the notice.

Zhu Yan, a contact person with the hotel supervision squad in the Beijing Police, told the Global Times that his team did issue the notice to hotels, but said he could not comment on the "major case" itself.

Zhang Siyang and agencies contributed to the story
 
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what do they want to achive by censoring the news.

Most likely it was not an accident, but a protest for freedom and democracy. And you know how CCP reacts to such demands and protests!!
 
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Stop the lies Yindumen. Global Times is a Chinese News Outfit.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/820978.shtml#.Um_SvfnFU8w

Tiananmen jeep crash kills 5, police name Xinjiang suspects
Global Times | 2013-10-29 1:38:01
By Jiang Jie and Liu Sha


349dd009-ca08-4fb1-b7ec-064ebd83e9f8.jpeg

Workers stand before a police barrier outside Tiananmen rostrum in Beijing on Monday after a jeep crashed into the crowd in Tiananmen Square and burst into flames, killing five and injuring 38, police said. Photo: AFP



Five people were killed and 38 injured after a jeep ploughed through crowds before it crashed and caught fire close to the Tiananmen rostrum in Beijing on Monday, local police said on its official Sina Weibo.

The driver and two passengers in the jeep were killed at the scene and another two tourists, a woman from the Philippines and a man from Guangdong Province in southern China, died of severe injuries, Beijing police said in a posting on its official microblog account.

Another 38 tourists and police officers, including a male and two female Filipinos and one Japanese man were also injured in the incident. The jeep crashed into a railing of the Jinshui Bridge outside the southern gate of the Forbidden City before bursting into flames at 12:05 pm, police said.

Two victims, who had been taken to Beijing Hospital, were still in a serious condition, a hospital staffer told the Global Times, but wished not to be identified.

Motor vehicles were seen returning to Chang'an Avenue, a major thoroughfare in Beijing, after the road was blocked off briefly by the police. Reporters from the Global Times witnessed police patrols at every 50 meters on the avenue.

"The vehicle ran very fast, I could hear people screaming all the way while the vehicle ploughed through the crowds," a female eyewitness at the scene, told the Global Times.

The tourist from Ningbo, Zhejiang Province, who goes by the name of Renqiao1220 on her Sina Weibo account, declined to give her real name to this newspaper but described the scene of the incident in detail.

She said that she suddenly saw a white SUV rushing into a crowd of visitors and then all the way towards the guardrail of Jinshui Bridge before it set aflame. She also said that she saw police cars chasing the SUV before it crashed.

"I heard the car's horn honking, but I noticed it too late. My mind went completely blank and when I woke again I was completely on the ground," the Guangzhou-based Nandu Daily quoted an injured Filipino woman called Francesca as saying.

Late on Monday, the police sent a notice to hotels in Beijing, in which hotel management were asked to look out for "suspicious guests" that had visited hotels since October 1. The police also sought information on "suspicious vehicles."

The police notice said that a "major case had taken place on Monday" and named two residents of Pishan county and Shanshan county of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region as likely suspects.

The police also described a light-colored SUV, and four license number plates, all starting with the regional character showing they were from Xinjiang, in the notice.

Zhu Yan, a contact person with the hotel supervision squad in the Beijing Police, told the Global Times that his team did issue the notice to hotels, but said he could not comment on the "major case" itself.

Zhang Siyang and agencies contributed to the story

Noodle head , learn to read the article posted

A BBC news team was detained at the square for about 20 minutes after the incident, Asia bureau chief Jo Floto said. The channel’s cable broadcasts in China were blocked when they tried to air a report on it. Two journalists for the Agence France-Presse news agency were also briefly detained, and digital images were deleted from their equipment, the agency reported
 
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Why CCP censor this kind of news? This kind of news post no political backlash from inside China or from abroad. This is not about the Chinese population protesting and start a arm revolution and escalate into a civil war. Indian need to calm the fcuk down. Just post the news don't change and add your personal opinion to the title of the article.
 
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Indian Numskull in here equate someone drive their car into a crowd by accident or deliberately that no one know to the CCP drove their tank into a crowd and kill the people in this incident to oppress their people. Therefore, this kind of news must never be report and completely hid from the public views. Why would CCP want to suppress the freedom of the press to report about deadly car accident?
 
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Indian Numskull in here equate someone drive their car into a crowd by accident or deliberately that no one know to the CCP drove their tank into a crowd and kill the people in this incident to oppress their people. Therefore, this kind of news must never be report and completely hid from the public views. Why would CCP want to suppress the freedom of the press to report about deadly car accident?
Sorry dude change the translator
 
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