Citations:Aksu

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English citations of Aksu

Prefecture

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  • 1995, Gregor Benton, Alan Hunter, editors, Wild Lily, Prairie Fire[1], Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 223:
    The representative took the hint, and decided after consulting the masses to approach the Aksu Prefecture Administrative Office. When they arrived for negotiations, the office made an emergency call to the Xinjiang Autonomous Region Party Committee in Urumqi, which telegraphed back that the problem should be dealt with on the spot.
  • 2013, Paul A. Marshall, Persecuted: The Global Assault on Christians[2], Thomas Nelson, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 22:
    Shaya prison is located in remote Aksu Prefecture, about seven hundred miles southwest of the Xinjiang capital of Urumqi.
  • 2014, Michael Dillon, Xinjiang and the Expansion of Chinese Communist Power: Kashgar in the Early Twentieth Century[3], Routledge, page 197:
    Units of the 5th Division of the 2nd Army also marched in from Yanqi, and, on 29 December 1949, arrived in Onsu (Wensu) County in Aksu Prefecture.

City

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  • 1946, Chandra Chakraberty, The Cultural History of the Hindus[4], Calcutta: Vijaya Krishna Brothers, page 267:
    The Hans strove to capture the important trade route with the west through Hami, Aksu, Kashgar, Turfan and Khotan.
  • 1981 April 26, “Youths resist Communist pressure”, in Free China Weekly[5], volume XXII, number 16, Taipei, page 1:
    A report from the China mainland indicated that scores of demonstrating youths were killed last November in Aksu in the western province of Sinkiang, after 70,000 of them rusticated from Shanghai staged a demonstration.
    They took over the office building of the "agriculture bureau" and demanded that the Peiping regime allow them to return to Shanghai. Communist "vice premier" Wang Chen was forced to hurry to Aksu from Peiping and instructed troops to suppress the youths by any means, even if it meant bloodshed.
  • 1989, Colin Thubron, The Silk Road: Beyond the Celestial Kingdom[6], Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 15:
    From here the Silk Road bifurcates. In times of unrest, the caravans would move south through the sparse towns along the foot of the Kunlum Mountains, protected from robbers by the Taklimakan desert. But more often they would brave the great northern route with its line of rich oases - Turfan, Korla, Kuqa, Aksu - and hope to evade marauders from the grasslands just to the north.
  • 2022 May 13, “China database reveals the thousands detained in Xinjiang”, in France 24[7], archived from the original on 13 May 2022[8]:
    But a suspected police list leaked to Uyghur activists outside China has located Memetili in a prison outside the city of Aksu, some 600 kilometres (375 miles) from their home.