Letter bombs to multiple locations kill seven in China


(MENAFN- Gulf Times) Seven people were killed yesterday when 15 letter bombs exploded in southern China, state media said, with blasts reported in multiple locations including government offices.
Police described the blasts, which injured 51 people on the eve of China's national day, as a "criminal case", ruling out a "terrorist act".
They said a 33-year-old local suspect had been identified but gave no immediate motive and were seeking his arrest.
The explosions occurred in at least 13 locations in the rural county of Liucheng in the Guangxi region, the Nanguo Morning News, a local newspaper, cited police as saying.
They included a prison, a government office and a shopping centre, it said.
Pictures posted online, which could not be verified, showed portions of six-storey buildings gutted and collapsed, and streets littered with glass, bricks and other debris.
Other photos showed overturned cars, victims bandaged and laid on makeshift stretchers and plumes of grey smoke rising above a residential district.
The explosives were apparently placed in express delivery packages, the official Xinhua news agency said.
"The public security department has quickly started to work and has already determined it was a criminal case," it quoted Liucheng police as saying.
A "preliminary suspect" was named as M Wei, aged 33 and living in the town of Dapu in the county.
"Currently, public security organisations are sparing no efforts to carry out investigation work," it added.
Liucheng county is under the administration of the city of Liuzhou.
In recent years several disgruntled Chinese citizens have bombed local government offices and public places to try to draw attention to their grievances.
In 2013 a man set off a series of home-made bombs packed with ball-bearings outside a provincial government headquarters in northern China, killing at least one person and wounding eight.
Xinhua said at the time he sought to "take revenge on society".
The same year a street vendor set fire to a bus in east China's Fujian province, killing himself and nearly four dozen passengers in an act of retaliation against local authorities.
Legal paths for pursuing justice in China are limited, as courts are subject to political influence and corruption. Citizens who lodge complaints against authorities often find themselves being detained.
Authorities maintain tight control over public security in the one-party state and place huge importance on maintaining social order.
A younger brother of a disgraced former senior Chinese military officer, who has been accused of corruption, has been sacked from his position as a senior provincial official, state media said yesterday.
Guo Boquan has been removed as head of the civil affairs department of the northwestern province of Shaanxi, the official Xinhua news agency said, without providing any details.
Chinese media reports have identified him as a younger brother of Guo Boxiong, who was a vice chairman of the powerful Central Military Commission until he retired in 2012.
Guo Boxiong was accused of bribery and abuse of power in July.
It was not possible to reach Guo Boquan for comment, and it was not clear if he was being accused of any wrongdoing.
Guo Boxiong's son, major general Guo Zhenggang, was put under his own graft investigation in early March.
No family members have been given an opportunity to defend themselves in public and it was not clear if any of them have lawyers.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, who heads the Central Military Commission that controls the People's Liberation Army, has made weeding out corruption in the military a top goal as he steps up modernisation efforts.
Xi has also overseen a sweeping battle against graft in every level of the government and ruling Communist Party since assuming power three years ago.


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