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In this Sunday March 2, 2014 photo, Uighur women, left, sew as a Han Chinese woman rides her tricycle cart past them in a community shared by both Han Chinese and Uighur ethnic residents in Kunming, in southwestern China's Yunnan province. China said the vicious slashing spree Saturday that killed 29 people in the southern city was the work of separatists linked to international terrorism, but the assailants’ homespun methods and low-tech weapons - nothing more than long knives - have led some analysts to suspect they didn’t get outside help.  (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)

In this Sunday March 2, 2014 photo, Uighur women, left, sew as a Han Chinese woman rides her tricycle cart past them in a community shared by both Han Chinese and Uighur ethnic residents in Kunming, in southwestern China's Yunnan province. China said the vicious slashing spree Saturday that killed 29 people in the southern city was the work of separatists linked to international terrorism, but the assailants’ homespun methods and low-tech weapons - nothing more than long knives - have led some analysts to suspect they didn’t get outside help. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)

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