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China

Senior Uygur official in China's restive Xinjiang province investigated for graft

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Riot police take part in a security drill in Urumqi. Hundreds of people have been killed in the region in the past few years, most in violence between Uygurs and ethnic majority Han Chinese. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

A senior ethnic Uygur official in the unruly far western region of Xinjiang is being investigated for suspected serious "discipline violations", the Communist Party's anti-graft watchdog said on Sunday, using a euphemism for corruption.

Alimjan Maimaitiming, 55, is secretary general of the regional government. The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection gave no other details.

According to his official biography he is from Cherchen, also known by its Chinese name of Qiemo, in the heavily Uygur deep south of Xinjiang. He had previously been editor-in-chief of the official Xinjiang Daily.

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Hundreds of people have been killed in the region in the past few years, most in violence between the Muslim Uygur people who call Xinjiang home and ethnic majority Han Chinese.

In March, the CCDI announced on its website that Li Zhi, who was also formerly deputy chief of Xinjiang's people's congress, was suspected of serious violations of party discipline and law, a term that usually refers to corruption.

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Li, 64, became party chief of Urumqi, in November 2006, but was sacked two months after riots on July 5, 2009.

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