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Hostage survivors prepare to leave Shanghai
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"He was pacing up and down the bus, they couldn't understand what he was saying. Then he turned around, opened up his jacket and he had a bomb strapped to him," said Sue Wynne, a friend of hostage Rhiannon Dunkley, after speaking to her.

In Canberra, Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said there was nothing to suggest the Australians were deliberately targeted and the motive for the attack remained unclear.

"We've asked for a full briefing to try to understand the motivation," Smith told journalists in Melbourne.

The travel agents were on an educational tour to Beijing, Xi'an and Shanghai, organized by a Sydney-based travel wholesale company, when the attack took place.

As the Australians boarded flights for home from Shanghai, the company's General Manager Jimmy Liu said China was a safe destination for the Olympics in August and described the attack as "very rare."

Smith said Australian travel danger warnings for China were set at a very low level, but urged travelers planning trips to the country for the Olympics to read them for their security.

"This is an unusual event for China and the Chinese authorities are no doubt putting their minds to the motivation behind it," Smith said.

Australian foreign ministry advice for China warns that foreigners have been assaulted and robbed, "particularly in popular expatriate gathering areas."

Xinhua news agency said police believed the man was named Xia Tao and was a worker in Xi'an. Police investigators did not offer an explanation for the attack. China has been preparing for an influx of foreign visitors for the Beijing Olympics, and the government has been at pains to highlight the security steps it is taking.

"I don't view this case as an embarrassment to China. Such things happen in every country and what matters is how you handle it," said Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang. "Compared with other countries, China is a safer destination for foreign tourists and we will continue to provide a safe environment for foreigners to work, study, live and travel."

(Shanghai Daily March 6, 2008)

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