Following the attack, the Chinese government tightened security in Kashgar, placing public facilities on heightened alert and restricting information flow about the attack. The attackers were identified as males, taxi driver Kurbanjan Hemit (28), and vegetable vendor Abdurahman Azat (33). They are members of the Uyghur ethnic group, and it was suspected that the attack was a terrorist action by
ETIM separatists.
Xinhua called the incident a terrorist attack. Police investigators reported that they had recovered documents calling for a
holy war, a homemade firearm, and nine explosives, whose design was similar to the explosives found in a
raid on an ETIM facility in January 2007. A US intelligence monitoring group stated that the ETIM planned to carry out terrorist attacks during the week before the opening ceremonies of the Olympic games. This attack happened four days before the
Beijing Olympics, after repeated warnings in recent months from the Chinese government that militants from the restive Xinjiang region were planning to stage attacks to disrupt the Games. In September 2008, the New York Times reported that three tourists who witnessed the events claimed that no explosions were heard and that the attackers appeared to be machete-wielding police officers attacking other uniformed men.
Detention of media On the night of 4 August, a
Tokyo Shimbun cameraman and a
Japanese TV reporter, along with two
Hong Kong reporters making reports near the police post, were detained by security. The two Hong Kong reporters were not harmed. However, the Japanese reporters were beaten and punched. All four were released after two hours of detention. The Japanese government protested against the Chinese actions, although it has made no formal statement as there was no confirmation. Chinese officials and police in Kashgar apologized for the incident, but accused the two men of breaking rules. ==See also==