One dead in blasts at China party offices

One person has died in a series of blasts outside a provincial headquarters of China's ruling Communist Party.

china_explosion_shaanxi_aap.jpg

Policemen cordon off a street after an explosion outside a provincial headquarters of China's ruling Communist Party in Shanxi province. (AAP)

A series of bombs packed with ball-bearings have exploded outside a provincial headquarters of China's ruling Communist Party killing at least one person, police and reports say.

The blasts in Taiyuan on Wednesday come a little over a week after a fatal car crash described by authorities as a "terrorist attack" in Tiananmen Square, the symbolic heart of the Chinese state, and days ahead of a highly anticipated meeting of top party leaders in Beijing.

"There were several explosions caused by small explosive devices near the party provincial commission in Taiyuan," the capital of the northern province of Shanxi, local police said on a verified social media account.

"Public security officials are currently on the scene and working all-out to investigate the incident," it added.

One person was confirmed dead, another was severely wounded and seven slightly hurt in the blasts, a provincial government news portal said, citing police.

Ball bearings were seen scattered around the scene, China's official Xinhua news agency reported. They are an ingredient used by bombmakers to increase the chances of blasts inflicting injuries.

State broadcaster CCTV reported that some of the explosives detonated in flowerbeds at the entrance to the party provincial commission.

Pictures posted on China's hugely popular weibo social networks showed vehicle doors peppered with small impacts, and tyres with holes punched through them.

Other photos showed car windows blown out and debris scattered across the road, and one showed two metal spheres, the size of large marbles, that appeared to have been among the ball bearings sprayed by the bombs.

Xinhua quoted two witnesses near the site who said they heard a loud noise, then saw smoke, followed by a minivan exploding.

Images showed several fire engines on a road, which had been blocked to traffic, and a large crowd on one side of the street.

About 20 cars parked 100 metres away from the site had been damaged, CCTV reported.

"Witnesses said that there were seven sounds of explosion that lasted several minutes and were very powerful," Chinese media company Caixin reported.

The Shanxi blasts come after a car barrelled into Beijing's Tiananmen Square last week, killing two tourists and injuring dozens, with the three people inside dying after they set the vehicle on fire.

Authorities termed that incident "terrorism" and have said it was carried out by several people from China's far-western Xinjiang region, home to the mostly Muslim Uighur minority.

China's top security official said a separatist group known as the East Turkestan Islamic Movement was a behind-the-scenes supporter of the attack.

Following the Tiananmen attack, authorities moved quickly to clamp down on discussion of the incident, deleting photos and comments posted on China's popular online social networks.

But the Chinese Internet was abuzz with dispatches and photos of the Taiyuan explosions on Wednesday, and "Shanxi provincial commission" was the fifth-most-popular search topic on China's Twitter-like Weibo site late Wednesday morning.


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Source: AAP


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