Thursday, 26 May 2011

DEADLY BLASTS IN EASTERN CHINA


Three explosions at government offices
in the city of Fuzhou kill two and injure six, 
state media reports.

This next piece, dear Readers, is extremely unnerving. I have a niggling fear that China is being pushed towards something it does not want. Perhaps these bombings are retaliation for China backing Pakistan in the latest war the United States is declaring on that nation. Perhaps it is just being done to “move things along”.

Whatever the reason, car bombs and such are the trademark of CIA/Mossad agents as I have written before in this article on American terrorist training. 


The possible reasons for this coordinated action are NOT the result of disgruntled Chinese citizens! That is a red herring being tossed out to sugar coat this event.

Combine this highly professional and coordinated set of actions with the current bill traveling through the American Congress to begin World War three and we, all citizens of this highly stressed planet, all have great cause to be very, very concerned.

One of the three blasts that struck the city of Fuzhou 
on Thursday [Courtesy of Chinese media]

May 26, 2011

Explosions are reported at three government buildings in an eastern Chinese city, possibly caused by explosions in cars, according to state media.

The blasts killed two people and injured six, the official Xinhua news agency reported.

 
The nearly simultaneous blasts happened in Fuzhou city, Jiangxi province, on Thursday morning, the official Xinhua news agency reported. It did not give details of the cause or casualties.
 .
Al Jazeera's Andrew Thomas reported from Beijing that all three explosions occurred within half an hour of each other.
.
A car exploded outside the prosecutor's office in Fuzhou city, then 10 minutes later an explosion went off at a district government building. Fifteen minutes after that, a car exploded outside a drug administration office, said an official at the information office of Jiangxi province.
Fuzhou officials have stated that there were no suspects in custody yet, Thomas said.

The blast at the prosecutor's office blew out windows and destroyed a car, Xinhua reported. At least 10 vehicles were damaged at Fuzhou's Linchuan district government building.

Zhang Weizhang, a local man, told Reuters it was possible a disgruntled local resident was to blame.
"There are plenty of people complaining about the government. They ignore complaints. They've ignored mine," Zhang said, explaining that he was in a dispute over forestry rights in Fuzhou's Linchuan district.

"But nobody ordinary would do something like this. This isn't normal for here."
Earlier this month a bank cashier who had been fired for stealing money hurled a gasoline bomb into the bank, injuring dozens of people in western China.

A city of four million, deep in farming country, Fuzhou has experienced the fast, chaotic economic growth typical of many Chinese cities in recent years.

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