Woman,
19, confesses to foiled plane attack A
19-year-old Uygur woman has confessed to police that she attempted to blow up
a China Southern passenger plane on March 7, the Ministry of Public Security said
yesterday.
The
suspect, Guzalinur Turdi, boarded the plane from Urumqi to Beijing after passing
through airport security checks and tried to go ahead with the terrorist attack
before it was thwarted. "She
has fully confessed to the accusations," the ministry said in a statement
disclosing the latest investigation results. Foreign
Ministry spokesman Qin Gang yesterday rejected some Western media's skepticism
over the confession. "Was
this confession coerced in any way through the use of torture or any other means?
Was her confession coerced?" asked an AFP reporter at a regular news briefing. "Relevant
departments in China have dealt with this case based on the law, so I don't know
why you'd raise this question," Qin said. "There
are many crimes around the world, many crimes in the US and France. Will you also
ask them if they use torture to get confessions?" he asked. Wang
Lequan, the Party chief of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, told the Xinhua
News Agency last week that investigations had found that the incident was masterminded
by Eastern Turkestan separatists from abroad. He
said a man was detained along with Turdi on board the flight; and a third suspect,
held a week later, admitted that he had masterminded, instigated and helped carry
out the attempted crime. Flight
CZ6901 left Urumqi at 10:35 am on March 7 and made an emergency landing in Lanzhou,
the capital of Gansu province, two hours later. All the passengers and crew were
safe and arrived in Beijing the next morning. "Investigations
showed that the incident was an organized and premeditated terrorist attack targeting
the aircraft," the ministry statement said, adding that the case continues
to be under investigation. "We
are fully prepared for security threats from any side and completely capable of
foiling any terrorist attack," it said. According
to earlier reports, the airline plot was thwarted by air marshals on the flight. Sources
at the airline said that crew members smelled gasoline on Turdi as she left a
toilet during the flight. They found a beverage can containing flammable liquid
in a dustbin in the toilet. The drink had been replaced with the flammable liquid,
using a syringe. A
week after the incident, the General Administration of Civil Aviation of China
(CAAC) issued a notice banning domestic air passengers from carrying liquids as
part of tighter security measures. Starting
two days ago, passengers are also required to take off their shoes for safety
checks. From May,
the CAAC has also ordered international airlines to provide accurate and complete
passenger and cabin staff information to Chinese border control stations before
landing. The information
should include name, nationality, gender, birth date and passport number and passport
expiry date", the CAAC said in a notice posted on its website (www.caac.gov.cn). (China
Daily, March 28, 2008) |