Chinese police have killed 28 members of a "terrorist group" in the mainly Muslim Xinjiang region, authorities

Chinese police have killed 28 members of a "terrorist group" in the mainly Muslim Xinjiang region, authorities announced Friday, in the bloodiest such operation in months and as Beijing denounces Western "double standards" in the wake of the Paris attacks. 


The killings took place over the course of a 56-day manhunt following an attack on a colliery in Aksu in September that left 16 people dead, said the Xinjiang regional government's Tianshan web portal. One "thug" surrendered, it added. 


It was the first official confirmation of both the attack on the mine and its aftermath. 


Xinjiang is the homeland of the mostly Muslim Uighur ethnic minority, many of whom complain of discrimination and controls on their culture and religion, and is often hit by deadly unrest. 


The assault on the colliery was "a violent terrorist attack under the direct command of an overseas extremist organisation", Tianshan said. 


The official Xinhua news agency cited a Xinjiang government statement identifying the attack leaders as Musa Tohniyaz and Mamat Aysa, both apparently Uighur names. 


Friday's reports came after Radio Free Asia (RFA), which is funded by the US government, said that more than 50 people including five police were killed in a knife attack at a colliery in Aksu in September. 


The assailants targeted security guards, the mine owner's house, and a workers' dormitory, it said

Source: NNA