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"There are so many security forces deployed here, yet they're incapable of protecting us," Zhao said. Xinhua gave no information about when the stabbings occurred or the number of victims, but quoted a deputy director of the region's health department as saying nobody had been infected or poisoned and medical workers were conducting regular follow-up checks. The July riots -- China's worst ethnic violence in decades -- killed 197 people, injured 1,700 more and sparked a massive security crackdown in the traditionally Muslim western region of Xinjiang, of which Urumqi is the capital. The protest also comes a day after an international trade fair opened in Urumqi, with the government trumpeting the area for foreign investment. "It is safe for foreign businesspeople to invest in Xinjiang. They should not have safety concerns," He Yiming, the regional commerce department head, was quoted as saying by the state-owned China Daily newspaper on Wednesday. On a visit to Xinjiang late last month, Hu called for the strengthening of ethnic unity and Xinjiang's local economy. China claims the July riot was instigated by exiled Uighur activist Rebiya Kadeer, an accusation she strongly denies. Uighurs have long complained of discrimination and economic marginalization by Han migrants who have flooded into Xinjiang since communist troops entered the region in 1949. Like Tibetans, another restive minority, many Uighurs claim they were independent for much of their history. The July unrest broke out after police stopped an initially peaceful protest by Uighur youths, prompting crowds to smash windows, burn cars and attack Han Chinese. Two days later, Han vigilantes carried out revenge attacks.
[Associated
Press;
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