BEIJING — China said Tuesday that it had uncovered an unspecified "major terrorist organization," a claim that came just ahead of the anniversary of bloody ethnic rioting in the far western region of Xinjiang.
The Public Security Ministry gave little information in its brief announcement, which also coincided with the launch of a government propaganda campaign to promote patriotism in restive Xinjiang, following moves to strengthen security there.
The announcement posted on the Public Security Ministry's website said only that police had "cracked a case involving a major terrorist organization." It said details would be given at a news conference Thursday.
It wasn't immediately clear whether the alleged terrorist group was Xinjiang-based, although Beijing has consistently labeled those opposing Chinese rule over the traditionally Muslim Uighur region as terrorists. In 2008, the government claimed to have cracked a number of Uighur plots to attack the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
Beijing has also applied the term to Tibetans who live abroad and whom China accuses of fomenting anti-government riots in 2008 that killed 22 in Tibet's capital Lhasa. Domestic enemines such as the banned Falun Gong meditation sect have also been described as terrorists.
Long-simmering tensions between Uighurs and majority Han Chinese migrants in Xinjiang turned deadly in the capital Urumqi last July 5, leaving nearly 200 people dead in China's worst ethnic violence in decades. Beijing accused overseas organizers of plotting the violence.
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