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The Shanghai massacre of 12 April 1927, the April 12 Purge or the April 12 Incident as it is commonly known in China, was the violent suppression of Chinese Communist Party (CCP) organizations and leftist elements in Shanghai by forces supporting General Chiang Kai-shek and conservative factions in the Kuomintang (Chinese Nationalist Party or KMT).
According to Chinese authorities and media, Yang Jia ignited eight petrol bombs at the front gate of the police headquarters in Zhabei, a Shanghai suburb, at about 9:40 am, 1 July 2008 – the anniversary of the founding of the Chinese Communist Party. [4] He then stabbed security guard Gu Jianming, who tried to stop Yang, with a knife.
However, it later evolved into Tibetan attacks on civilians such as Han and Hui civilians and shops, cars, the Lhasa Great Mosque and other civilian facilities. 2008 Kashgar attack: 2008, 4 August Kashgar, Xinjiang: 17 Two men drove an attack on the armed police of the border guard detachment of Kashgar, which was in operation.
Three people were killed and 15 others were injured in a knife attack at a supermarket in Shanghai on Monday evening, local police said.
Authorities and the official news service of China, Xinhua, said that the knife attack was an act of terrorism carried out by Uighur separatists from Xinjiang, a province at the far west of China. The incident is now known as '3-01' in China. It was also called "China's 9-11" by the Global Times, a state-run media in China. [28]
On May 5, China and Japan signed the Shanghai Ceasefire Agreement (simplified Chinese: 淞沪停战协定; traditional Chinese: 淞滬停戰協定; pinyin: Sōnghù Tíngzhàn Xiédìng). The agreement made Shanghai a demilitarized zone and forbade China to garrison troops in areas surrounding Shanghai, Suzhou , and Kunshan , while allowing the ...
A Chinese court on Thursday sentenced a 52-year-old to death for a knife attack that injured a Japanese mother and her young child and killed a bus attendant near Shanghai last June. The attack ...
Locals mourning after the attack. According to an examination of the First Branch of Shanghai People's Procuratorate, the criminal suspect, Huang Yichuan, male, was unemployed at the time of the attack. [11] He claimed that after a failure to find employment in many places, [11] he went to Shanghai in early June 2018. After arriving, Huang came ...