Legislators and political advisors have proposed improving law to curb terrorism following a terrorist attack that killed 29 and injured 143.
As the death toll from Saturday's terrorist attack at Kunming Railway Station in Yunnan province rose to 29 and the number of injured topped 130, the search for the perpetrators continued.
A memorial service for victims of Saturday's massacre is held in the south square of the railway station in Kunming on March 2, 2014.
Authorities are vowing stiff punishment for the terrorists who killed at least 29 people in brazen knife attack at crowded train station.
The terrorist attack in Kunming on Saturday was carried out with knives and machete-like blades, some reaching 60cm in length. Yet terrorist attacks can be carried out in many other ways, such as using bombs or firearms.
Expats, students and tourists were shocked by the ferocious knife attacks on Saturday in Kunming, but none said it would force them to leave the City of Spring.
First-hand accounts of the deadly carnage in the train station unleashed by group of at least 10 terrorists wielding knives and machete-like blades.
On Sina Weibo, netizens are spreading the word of stopping the circulation of bloody photos on the Internet.
Order has been restored at Kunming train station in Southwest China's Yunnan province where a deadly terrorist attack on Saturday night left 29 civilians dead and more than 130 injured.
There have been a series of deadly terrorist attacks in China over the past three years, most occurring in Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.
Many of the more than 130 people injured in the attack on Saturday were sent to seven hospitals in Kunming, capital of Yunnan province.
Most Chinese newspaper frontpages on Sunday highlight the terrorists' attack at Kunming Railway Station in the capital of southwest China's Yunnan province on March 1, 2014.