by Emily Rauhala
Xinjiang's ethnic Uighur Muslims have been subject to an "anti-terrorism" crackdown after a spate of deadly attacks
Several government departments in China’s Xinjiang
Uighur Autonomous Region have banned students and civil servants from
fasting during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. Statements posted on
school and government websites said the sure-to-be-unpopular policy was
aimed at protecting students and stopping government offices from being
used to promote religion, reports the Associated Press.
This is not the first instance of Chinese officials trying
to curtail religious freedom among Xinjiang’s ethnic Uighur Muslims,
but it comes at a particularly delicate time. A series of brutal attacks by what China says are religious extremists has spurred a year-long anti-terrorism crackdown in Xinjiang, including mass arrests and trials, cash awards for information and random searches.
Critics counter that the chief concern is not links to
global terrorism, but widespread dissatisfaction with Chinese rule. A
Muslim people that take their cultural and linguistic cues from Central
Asia, Xinjiang’s Uighurs say they have been overwhelmed by an influx of
migrants from the Han heartland to the east. They also complain of
discrimination in the job market, limits on free expression and
restriction on their right to pray, dress — and now, fast — as they so
choose.
Emily Rauhala
Source: http://time.com/2952833/china-bans-ramadan-fasting-for-officials-students-in-restive-northwest/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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