[…] The explosions occurred on the day China\u2019s highest court, top prosecution office and the Ministry of Public Security, which handles policing, issued instructions to their subsidiary organs throughout the country on how to deal with cases of terrorism and religious extremism, describing them as a \u201cgrave threat\u201d to national security and social stability.[Source<\/strong><\/a>]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Meanwhile, Simon Denyer and colleagues from the Washington Post tried to travel to Shache, Xinjiang, the site of a violent incident last month<\/a>, but were detained and deported from the region. Denyer reports on the impact the crackdown on terrorism and religious extremism is having on the lives on Uyghurs <\/strong><\/a>in Xinjiang:<\/p>\n
[…] Across Shache county, the Internet has been cut, and text messaging services disabled, while foreigners have been barred. But in snatched conversations, in person and on the telephone, with the few people in the region brave enough to talk, a picture of constant harassment across Xinjiang emerges. [Source<\/strong><\/a>]<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Read more about Xinjiang<\/a>, via CDT.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"