How Terrible China Detains Five Over Tiananmen Crash!

Tiananmen Square as smoke rises into the air. (Getty Images)

According to The Wall Street Journal, Chinese police said that terrorists were behind Monday’s deadly car crash in Tiananmen Square and that they had detained five suspects, as more details emerged to suggest the rare violent attack in China’s capital was rooted in ethnic grievances.

Authorities on Wednesday didn’t place blame on any group, but released information suggesting the attack was carried out by people from the western region of Xinjiang, which has seen protests against Chinese rule by some members of its mostly Muslim Uighur minority.

Authorities detained the suspects about 10 hours after Monday’s crash, the official Xinhua news agency said on Wednesday. It didn’t say where the suspects, two of whom are women, were detained. The occupants of the car were a man, his wife and his mother, who died after they ignited gasoline in the vehicle, according to the Xinhua report, which cited a spokesman with the Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau.

The crash—which occurred in front of the Forbidden City in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, just below the famous portrait of Mao Zedong —also killed two tourists and injured 40 others, according to authorities.

Police described the attack as “carefully planned, organized and premeditated,” Xinhua said. They recovered gasoline canisters, iron rods, two machetes and banners with “religious extremist” slogans from the vehicle used in the attack, Xinhua said. Police identified the vehicle used in the attack as a Jeep with a license plate from Xinjiang, Xinhua said.

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Why is India so bad for women?

Why is India so bad for women?

Women traveling on a bus in Chennai. Photograph: Gustafsson/Rex Features

Of all the rich G20 nations, India has been labelled the worst place to be a woman. But how is this possible in a country that prides itself on being the world’s largest democracy?

Helen Pidd writes for The Guardian about an ashram perched high on a hill above the noisy city of Guwahati in north-east India where there is a small exhibit commemorating the life of India’s most famous son. Alongside an uncomfortable-looking divan where Mahatma Gandhi once slept is a display reminding visitors of something the man himself said in 1921: “Of all the evils for which man has made himself responsible, none is so degrading, so shocking or so brutal as his abuse of the better half of humanity; the female sex (not the weaker sex).”

One evening two weeks ago, just a few miles downhill, a young student left a bar and was set upon by a gang of at least 18 men. They dragged her into the road by her hair, tried to rip off her clothes and smiled at the cameras that filmed it all. It was around 9.30pm on one of Guwahati’s busiest streets – a chaotic three-lane thoroughfare soundtracked by constantly beeping horns and chugging tuk-tuks. But for at least 20 minutes, no one called the police. They easily could have. Many of those present had phones: they were using them to film the scene as the men yanked up the girl’s vest and tugged at her bra and groped her breasts as she begged for help from passing cars. We know this because a cameraman from the local TV channel was there too, capturing the attack for his viewers’ enjoyment. The woman was abused for 45 minutes before the police arrived.

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