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Another Explosion Hits Terrified Southern China Region


A damaged building is seen after explosions hit Liucheng county, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China, Sept. 30, 2015.
A damaged building is seen after explosions hit Liucheng county, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China, Sept. 30, 2015.

At least 7 killed, as many as 51 injured in more than a dozen explosions in Guangxi province.

Another explosion rocked China's southern Guanxi province Thursday, a day after more than a dozen other blasts killed at least seven people and injured over 50 others at several locations.

The official Xinhua news agency says the latest explosion occurred at a residence in a six-story building in the Liucheng neighborhood of Liuzhou city. It is not clear if there were casualties.

State media reports quote authorities in the city of Liuzhou as saying a 33-year-old man with the family name of Wei is suspected of carrying out the bombings. Some reports say the suspect may have been seeking revenge over a medical dispute. It is not known if the man is in custody. Officials have yet to confirm a motive.

The local public security bureau confirmed that explosions occurred at 13 locations, including a shopping mall, jail, supermarket, rail station, a hospital and an open air market. The official Xinhua news agency is reporting that the explosions may have been caused by parcel bombs.

Photos on social media showed one building partially collapsed, cars overturned in the streets and what appeared to be the blown out remains of a shop front.

The explosions happened in rapid succession, according to accounts online, and one picture showed a man lying on the ground near an overturned car. Rubble was strewn around the area.

Another image just after the blast showed a cloud of smoke billowing hundreds of meters into the air.

One photo appeared to show a government building with its windows blown out.

Violent attacks over longstanding disputes are not uncommon in China, but the large number of explosions in a single incident is rare.

William Gallo contributed to this report.

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