A 19-year-old woman has confessed to attempting to hijack and crash a Chinese passenger plane that had to be diverted earlier this month after suspicious liquid was found on board, Xinhua news agency reported yesterday.
Xinhua said the woman confessed to a "terrorist" attempt on the March 7 flight to Beijing from Urumqi, the capital of China's Muslim Xinjiang region. The flight was diverted to Lanzhou, in western Gansu Province, after one or more passengers were found with suspicious liquids.
The woman is from China's Turkic Muslim Uighur minority, Xinhua said, and officials have called the attack part of a terror campaign to turn the region into an independent nation called East Turkestan.
China frequently says people have confessed to crimes. It was impossible to know if the woman had a lawyer to comment on her case.
China Central Television reported yesterday that the plot was a terrorist attack that had been organized and premeditated.
A male suspect previously confessed to masterminding the plot to crash the China Southern flight, but no further details have been released.
The unidentified woman had drained soda cans, used a syringe to fill them with gasoline and poured the contents in the plane's bathroom, next to the fuel-filled wings, the state-run Global Times newspaper reported on Wednesday.
A flight attendant who smelled the gasoline and discovered the woman was awarded 120,000 yuan (US$17,000) for her effort, the Southern Metropolitan Daily said yesterday. The crew was given 400,000 yuan in total, the paper said.
Xinjiang is a predominantly Muslim region with a culture that is distinctly different from that of China's ethnic Han majority. Uighurs have been sentenced to long prison terms or death on separatism charges, while use of the Uighur language is declining in schools and China's ethnic Han majority dominate the region's economy and government.
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