Screen grab of a private Wechat message sent by our Observer, Lin. Translation follows below.
Though Islam is legal in China, our Observers say that the authorities in the Xinjiang region are increasingly clamping down on the religion and its followers. This food handout is just one of many examples in which China has tried to pressure the country’s Uighurs. Civil servants have come under the most pressure, according to several official Chinese websites and official minutes taken during Communist Party meetings in Xinjiang. Measures taken include banning them from taking part in traditional religious practices that have anything to do with Ramadan, such as fasting or prayer gatherings. They’ve also been given the “responsibility” of discouraging friends, family, and colleagues from observing religious rituals and so-called “superstitions”. At the same time, official media outlets have been keen to stress that fasting during Ramadan could lead to health problems.
These restrictions weigh most heavily in the Xinjiang region in northwestern China, home to the country’s Uighurs. Along with a scattering of other Muslim minority groups, these Turkish-speaking Sunni Muslims make up 45% of the region’s population. Since the 1950s, the Chinese government has invested heavily in the region, which is rich in oil and natural gas, in a bid to encourage the country’s dominant ethnic group, Han Chinese, to settle there. The Han now make up 40% of the population. Tensions have been boiling over the past few years as China’s Uighurs fight back against attempts to make Xinjiang overwhelmingly Han Chinese. There have been frequent riots and in October 2013, an attack on Tiananmen Square led by a group of Uighur separatists left five people dead and 38 injured.
Screen grab of a private Wechat conversation sent by our Observer, Lin. Translation follows below.
Ramadan is largely tolerated elsewhere in China but our Observers say that in Xinjiang, authorities are clamping down harder on the ritual.
“My mother is so scared that she doesn’t even dare to keep a Koran at home”
Lan (not her real name) is a Uighur student who lives in eastern China. She says she never wants to go back to live in Xinjiang.
Screen grab of a message posted on Weibo. Translation below:
“Religious rituals are so badly looked down on that everyone is afraid”
Screen grab of a message posted on Weibo. Translation below:
“There are tanks and armed police literally on each and every corner”
Lin (not her real name) is a Uighur student. She grew up and worked in Xinjiang until 2013, when she left to live in Yunnan province in southwestern China.
I went back to Xinjiang to see my friends last year. The police stopped my car to go over everything that was in the boot before letting me enter a residential area. There are tanks and armed police on each and every corner. The authorities are against all kinds of gatherings and banned early-morning markets in 2013… I also have lots of friends who still live in Xinjiang who have had their passports confiscated.
Trips abroad are also restricted, as demonstrated by this Communist Party leaflet from the city of Yili located on the border with Kazakhstan. Photo of a private Wechat message sent by our Observer. Translation below.
“Residents in possession of passports must hand them to the commissariat of police before May 15, 2015. Use must be requested in advance. Passports not handed back on time will no longer be valid starting from the date indicated above.”
FRANCE 24 tried getting in touch with Uighurs who currently live in Xinjiang, but no one would speak to us out of fear that the authorities had tapped their phones.
Source: france24.com
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