Wednesday, August 15, 2012
China Bans Muslims from Fastingduring Ramadan
Beijing: China has banned Muslims in the
northwestern province of Xinjiang from
fasting during the month of Ramadan. The
government says the move is motivated by
health concerns, but others say it is a
campaign to secularize the Muslim minority
that can spread violence.
Guidance posted on several government
websites called on Communist Party leaders
to restrict Muslim civil servants, students
and teachers from observing fast, visiting
mosques and performing other relihious
activities during the holy month.
The statement posted on the Xinjiang
government website urged party leaders to
bring “gifts” of food to local village leaders
to ensure that they were eating during
Ramadan.
A statement from Zonglang township in
Xinjiang’s Kashgar district said that “the
county committee has issued
comprehensive policies on maintaining
social stability during the Ramadan period.
“It is forbidden for Communist Party cadres,
civil officials (including those who have
retired) and students to participate in
Ramadan religious activities,” said the
statement.
There is “a much more public and concerted
effort” than in previous years and in some
cases Communist Party leaders are
delivering food to village elders to try to get
them to break their fast, according to Dru
Gladney, a professor of anthropology at
Pomona College in California and an expert
on China’s Muslim minorities.
Regional spokeswoman Hou Hanmin was
quoted in the state-run Global Times
newspaper Friday as saying authorities
encourage people to “eat properly for study
and work” but don’t force anyone to eat
during Ramadan.
Xinjiang is home to about nine million
Uighurs, largely a Muslim ethnic minority,
many of whom accuse China’s leaders of
religious and political persecution. Long-
simmering resentment among Uighurs over
rule by China’s Han majority and an influx
of migrants has sporadically erupted into
deadly violence that claimed 200 lives in
July 2009.
World Uyghur Congress, an exiled rights
group, warned the policy would force “the
Uighur people to resist against the Chinese
rule even further.”
“By banning fasting during Ramadan, China
is using administrative methods to force the
Uighur people to eat in an effort to break
the fasting,” said Al-Jazeera has quoted
group spokesman Dilshat Rexit as saying.
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