China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Man injures self in blast outside US embassy

- By CUI JIA cuijia@chiandaily.com.cn

A man was hospitaliz­ed after he detonated a firecracke­rlike device in an intersecti­on near the United States embassy in Beijing around 1 pm on Thursday. The incident is an isolated one, Chinese authoritie­s said.

The 26-year-old man, surnamed Jiang, is from Tongliao, Inner Mongolia autonomous region, Beijing police said in a statement. His motive was unknown. He was treated for a hand injury. No one else was hurt, the police said.

Police found a lighter, debris of firecracke­rs and three unexploded firecracke­rs, each measuring 19.5 centimeter­s long and 3.5 cm in diameter.

Jiang’s family told the police he had suffered from visual and auditory hallucinat­ions since 2016 and had received treatment. Police checked his medical records and found he had been diagnosed with paranoid personalit­y disorder.

On Thursday afternoon, blood and glass debris were still visible at the intersecti­on of Tianze and Anjialou roads in Chaoyang district, which is about 30 meters from the embassy’s entrance for visa applicants.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang said on Thursday that the incident was isolated and that the police had dealt with it in a timely and appropriat­e manner.

The US embassy confirmed in a statement on Thursday that there had been an explosion at about 1 pm on the street outside the southeast corner of the compound. The police immediatel­y responded, and there was no damage to embassy property, it said.

Visa services at the embassy were temporaril­y affected but soon resumed, according to a visa applicant surnamed Li, who had been standing in line outside the compound for a scheduled interview at 1:15 pm.

“I was waiting to go inside the embassy when I heard a loud bang behind me. It sounded like someone lit up a firecracke­r. Then I noticed the smoke rising,” Li said. Yang Zekun, Mo Jingxi and Zhou Jin contribute­d to this story.

 ?? WANG JING / CHINA DAILY ?? Children and parents interact with police dogs in Beijing’s Changping district on Thursday. Ten dogs showed off their skills to about 200 visitors, such as searching for drugs and explosives. Some of the visitors were the children of police officers from canine units. They learned about the jobs done by their parents.
WANG JING / CHINA DAILY Children and parents interact with police dogs in Beijing’s Changping district on Thursday. Ten dogs showed off their skills to about 200 visitors, such as searching for drugs and explosives. Some of the visitors were the children of police officers from canine units. They learned about the jobs done by their parents.

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