China-Xinjiang Anti-terrorism/Children
FILE: Date and Location Unknown (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Various of terrorists
2. Children reading
3. Children shooting
4. Various of children watching model police car being blown up
FILE: Hotan City, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region - Jan 6, 2012 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
5. Building on fire
6. Various of suspect
FILE: Hotan City, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region - 2012 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
7. Various of photos of children
8. Debris, ashes in room
9. Burnt closet
10. Memettursun Ebey
11. Bumeryem, daughter of Memettursun
12. SOUNDBITE (Uygur) Bumeryem, daughter of Memettursun:
"In the video there're young kids like us doing exercises, with adults in the background holding rifles. The video was in some foreign language, not in Uygur, so I couldn't tell what it was about. But I remember it mentioned 'jihad.'"
13. Various of debris
14. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) police officer (no name given), Hotan Public Security Bureau (starting with shot 13):
"During the rescue, the terrorists showed no regard for the kids' lives. They have no humanity and were obsessed with 'jihad.' For their 'jihad,' they didn't care whether the kids survived."
Terrorists in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region trained children for terrorist attacks in their pursuit of so-called "jihad," according to a clip of a documentary "Fighting Terrorism in Xinjiang" aired by China Global Television Network (CGTN) on Thursday.
East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a leading terrorist group in China, recruited members of all ages, some of whom were children for their terrorist activities.
The clip shows how the ETIM members taught children to blow up model Chinese police cars.
On June 6, 2012, when the police came to investigate a residential building in Hotan City, one suspect detonated the explosives inside.
Another suspect jumped from the fifth floor with a four-year-old child, and they both died.
Firefighters rescued 53 children, the oldest 13 and the youngest only 4, from a 80-square-meter room in the building which was used as a school to train the children.
Memettursun Ebey had sent both of his children to this school. They had both physical trainings and religious studies every day.
"In the video there're young kids like us doing exercises, with adults in the background holding rifles. The video was in some foreign language, not in Uygur, so I couldn't tell what it was about. But I remember it mentioned 'jihad,'" said Bumeryem, the eldest daughter of Memettursun.
"During the rescue, the terrorists showed no regard for the kids' lives. They have no humanity and were obsessed with 'jihad.' For their 'jihad,' they didn't care whether the kids survived," said a police officer of Hotan Public Security Bureau who participated in the rescue.
The CGTN documentary contains never-before-seen footage showing the tragedies and atrocities committed by terrorists in the past in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
China-Xinjiang Anti-terrorism/Children
Dateline : File
Location : Xinjiang ,China
Duration : 2'02
FILE: Date and Location Unknown (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Various of terrorists
2. Children reading
3. Children shooting
4. Various of children watching model police car being blown up
FILE: Hotan City, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region - Jan 6, 2012 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
5. Building on fire
6. Various of suspect
FILE: Hotan City, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region - 2012 (CGTN - No access Chinese mainland)
7. Various of photos of children
8. Debris, ashes in room
9. Burnt closet
10. Memettursun Ebey
11. Bumeryem, daughter of Memettursun
12. SOUNDBITE (Uygur) Bumeryem, daughter of Memettursun:
"In the video there're young kids like us doing exercises, with adults in the background holding rifles. The video was in some foreign language, not in Uygur, so I couldn't tell what it was about. But I remember it mentioned 'jihad.'"
13. Various of debris
14. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) police officer (no name given), Hotan Public Security Bureau (starting with shot 13):
"During the rescue, the terrorists showed no regard for the kids' lives. They have no humanity and were obsessed with 'jihad.' For their 'jihad,' they didn't care whether the kids survived."
Terrorists in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region trained children for terrorist attacks in their pursuit of so-called "jihad," according to a clip of a documentary "Fighting Terrorism in Xinjiang" aired by China Global Television Network (CGTN) on Thursday.
East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a leading terrorist group in China, recruited members of all ages, some of whom were children for their terrorist activities.
The clip shows how the ETIM members taught children to blow up model Chinese police cars.
On June 6, 2012, when the police came to investigate a residential building in Hotan City, one suspect detonated the explosives inside.
Another suspect jumped from the fifth floor with a four-year-old child, and they both died.
Firefighters rescued 53 children, the oldest 13 and the youngest only 4, from a 80-square-meter room in the building which was used as a school to train the children.
Memettursun Ebey had sent both of his children to this school. They had both physical trainings and religious studies every day.
"In the video there're young kids like us doing exercises, with adults in the background holding rifles. The video was in some foreign language, not in Uygur, so I couldn't tell what it was about. But I remember it mentioned 'jihad,'" said Bumeryem, the eldest daughter of Memettursun.
"During the rescue, the terrorists showed no regard for the kids' lives. They have no humanity and were obsessed with 'jihad.' For their 'jihad,' they didn't care whether the kids survived," said a police officer of Hotan Public Security Bureau who participated in the rescue.
The CGTN documentary contains never-before-seen footage showing the tragedies and atrocities committed by terrorists in the past in northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
ID : 8129359
Published : 2019-12-08 11:54
Last Modified : 2019-12-12 23:05:00
Source : China Global Television Network (CGTN)
Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland
More