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China restricts Ramazan fasting in Muslim region

It's good that China takes measures to restrict freedom of some religious practices, Islamic, Chrtistian or any other religion. We don't want dominance of any religion in our lives.

After all we are majority of atheists. You have religious freedom in our country, but you are restricted to certain extent. If you are unhappy try to find somewhere that suits you.
 
With Pakistanis member mentality like you. That is why US divided and conquer strategy is so successful in Pakistan that they can trample and kill at will on Pakistan soil.

China is biggest ally of Pakistan. US by create mistrust between each other(China Pakistan) will be successful. Go ahead and become a US lackey.
Couldn't agree more brother.
 
What China does is exactly called SECULARism, India and West should learn from them, that minority appeasement for Votebank isnt healthy.

A lie repeat a thousand times it will become truth. That is why I need to get defensive and quickly exposed this fakes. In fact, most internet people are not that smart. If not, how can ISIS managed to get so many members from Europe thru internet and radicalize them. That is why some Uighur get radicalize easily when we ignore these lies spread by the west initially that create havoc in China in the mid-2000.
Then why this double standards for Modi about Gujrat 2002, when he had nothing to do with it?
 
Can Karsevaks here who are here to get excited on the fall of infidels, tell whether they can imagine banning Pooja, planting idols, will they be happy? When you are denied to visit the favourite temple or moorti and object putting religious symbols like that wrist band on your hand? Same is what Muslims are facing in China. (Just to compare and give a realization).
 
Look! We are not an Islamic country! Do you understand it?

Our governmental employees don't have freedom to carry out specials in Ramadan and they have their social duties to perform. So are the Christians or the Buddists
.

It's good that China takes measures to restrict freedom of some religious practices, Islamic, Chrtistian or any other religion. We don't want dominance of any religion in our lives.

After all we are majority of atheists. You have religious freedom in our country, but you are restricted to certain extent. If you are unhappy try to find somewhere that suits you.

The truth seems to lie somewhere in these posts.
 
The truth seems to lie somewhere in these posts.
You mean by listening to one uknown , no reputation forumer? I challenge you, to fly to Xinjiang and see the truth for yourself.
 
China steps up campaign against Ramadan in Xinjiang
Beijing accused of misguided attempt to secularise minority Uighurs by banning or discouraging civil servants, students and others from fasting

Muslims-in-Xinjiang-008.jpg

Muslims in Xinjiang offer Friday prayers near a no-stopping sign on the first day of Ramadan. Beijing says its attempts to restrict participation come out of health concerns. Photograph: AP

China is discouraging some Muslims in Xinjiang from fasting during Ramadan. The government says the move is motivated by health concerns.

Several city, county and village governments in the far-western region have posted notices on their websites banning or discouraging Communist party members, civil servants, students and teachers from fasting during the religious holiday.

A regional spokeswoman, Hou Hanmin, was quoted in the state-run Global Timeson Friday as saying authorities encourage people to "eat properly for study and work" but would not force anyone to eat during Ramadan.

Xinjiang is home to the Muslim Uighur ethnic group. Long-simmering resentment over the rule by China's Han majority and an influx of Han migrants has sporadically erupted into deadly violence.

Those familiar with the region say attempts to restrict participation in Ramadan are not new, but this year's campaign is more intense.

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.

"I think it is a misguided effort to try to secularise the Uighurs and my feeling is it will backfire," said Gladney. "It makes the Uighurs even more angry at the party for not honouring their religious customs."

Separatist sentiment is rife in Xinjiang, with some Uighurs advocating armed rebellion. A smaller fringe has been radicalised and trained in camps across the border in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

In July 2009, almost 200 people were killed during rioting between Uighurs and Han Chinese in Xinjiang's capital, Urumqi. Uighur activists say the riots were the result of decades of pent-up frustration with Chinese rule.

China has responded by boosting police presence and restricting the practice ofIslam – moves that have increased tensions.

Over the last few months, authorities in Xinjiang have stepped up a campaign against illegal religious schools, which they believe are fomenting extremism and separatist thought.

Hou said battling religious extremism and terror in the region remained a priority.

"Religious extremism is closely related to violence and terrorism, and cracking down on these is one of our top priorities," the regional spokeswoman was quoted as saying.

Ilham Tohti, a Beijing-based Uighur economist, said this year's campaign against participation in Ramadan was being more strictly enforced, with officials in some areas requiring people to sign pledges that they will not take part in religious activities.

Tohti said the campaign appeared to be aimed solely at Uighurs in Xinjiang, noting that Kazakh and Hui Muslims in Xinjiang, as well as Uighurs outside the region, face no such restrictions.

At the Central University for Nationalities in Beijing, where he teaches, there have been no warnings against taking part in Ramadan and up to 70 Muslim students, including about 10 Uighurs, gather nightly at a local restaurant next to campus to break their fast, he said.

He said officials may be particularly nervous about potential unrest in Xinjiang in the lead up to a once-a-decade leadership transition in Beijing in the autumn.

"As a result they are tightening control measures in many areas, not just religion, but this could give rise to new problems and they may end up with an outcome that is the opposite of what they were seeking," he said.

On Monday, the US state department released a global report on religious freedom that criticised the authorities in Xinjiang for their "repressive restrictions on religious practices" and failure to "distinguish between peaceful religious practice and criminal or terrorist activities".

China's foreign ministry dismissed the report as biased and called it interference in Chinese affairs.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/aug/03/china-restriction-ramadan-xinjiang-uighurs


The Guardian is a left wing paper which prides on its independence and sources
 
China steps up campaign against Ramadan in Xinjiang
Beijing accused of misguided attempt to secularise minority Uighurs by banning or discouraging civil servants, students and others from fasting

Muslims-in-Xinjiang-008.jpg

Muslims in Xinjiang offer Friday prayers near a no-stopping sign on the first day of Ramadan. Beijing says its attempts to restrict participation come out of health concerns. Photograph: AP

China is discouraging some Muslims in Xinjiang from fasting during Ramadan. The government says the move is motivated by health concerns.

Several city, county and village governments in the far-western region have posted notices on their websites banning or discouraging Communist party members, civil servants, students and teachers from fasting during the religious holiday.

A regional spokeswoman, Hou Hanmin, was quoted in the state-run Global Timeson Friday as saying authorities encourage people to "eat properly for study and work" but would not force anyone to eat during Ramadan.

Xinjiang is home to the Muslim Uighur ethnic group. Long-simmering resentment over the rule by China's Han majority and an influx of Han migrants has sporadically erupted into deadly violence.

Those familiar with the region say attempts to restrict participation in Ramadan are not new, but this year's campaign is more intense.

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.

"I think it is a misguided effort to try to secularise the Uighurs and my feeling is it will backfire," said Gladney. "It makes the Uighurs even more angry at the party for not honouring their religious customs."

Separatist sentiment is rife in Xinjiang, with some Uighurs advocating armed rebellion. A smaller fringe has been radicalised and trained in camps across the border in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

In July 2009, almost 200 people were killed during rioting between Uighurs and Han Chinese in Xinjiang's capital, Urumqi. Uighur activists say the riots were the result of decades of pent-up frustration with Chinese rule.

China has responded by boosting police presence and restricting the practice ofIslam – moves that have increased tensions.

Over the last few months, authorities in Xinjiang have stepped up a campaign against illegal religious schools, which they believe are fomenting extremism and separatist thought.

Hou said battling religious extremism and terror in the region remained a priority.

"Religious extremism is closely related to violence and terrorism, and cracking down on these is one of our top priorities," the regional spokeswoman was quoted as saying.

Ilham Tohti, a Beijing-based Uighur economist, said this year's campaign against participation in Ramadan was being more strictly enforced, with officials in some areas requiring people to sign pledges that they will not take part in religious activities.

Tohti said the campaign appeared to be aimed solely at Uighurs in Xinjiang, noting that Kazakh and Hui Muslims in Xinjiang, as well as Uighurs outside the region, face no such restrictions.

At the Central University for Nationalities in Beijing, where he teaches, there have been no warnings against taking part in Ramadan and up to 70 Muslim students, including about 10 Uighurs, gather nightly at a local restaurant next to campus to break their fast, he said.

He said officials may be particularly nervous about potential unrest in Xinjiang in the lead up to a once-a-decade leadership transition in Beijing in the autumn.

"As a result they are tightening control measures in many areas, not just religion, but this could give rise to new problems and they may end up with an outcome that is the opposite of what they were seeking," he said.

On Monday, the US state department released a global report on religious freedom that criticised the authorities in Xinjiang for their "repressive restrictions on religious practices" and failure to "distinguish between peaceful religious practice and criminal or terrorist activities".

China's foreign ministry dismissed the report as biased and called it interference in Chinese affairs.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/aug/03/china-restriction-ramadan-xinjiang-uighurs


The Guardian is a left wing paper which prides on its independence and sources

BS, Guardian is no different from biased anti-China wesbite! It just anyhow pick up news it deemed.
 
Can someone here prove the news is fake by showing the Korla city's Govt website doesn't have notice on its website asking people not to celebrate Ramzan
 
Can someone here prove the news is fake by showing the Korla city's Govt website doesn't have notice on its website asking people not to celebrate Ramzan
It can never be found becos its fake! :D
 
All I know is china is our closest ally and I will keep it that way. I have already seen far too many western documentaries defaming china. That never distort my image of it and rest will also not.
 
All I know is china is our closest ally and I will keep it that way. I have already seen far too many western documentaries defaming china. That never distort my image of it and rest will also not.
There have been conflicting reports. Uighurs themselves are saying these curbs are not true though the US media denies it.
 
It's good that China takes measures to restrict freedom of some religious practices, Islamic, Chrtistian or any other religion. We don't want dominance of any religion in our lives.

After all we are majority of atheists. You have religious freedom in our country, but you are restricted to certain extent. If you are unhappy try to find somewhere that suits you.

AGREE 100%, too much religion in developing countries have proven to be a nuisance for these countries than vice versa. China should adopt policies to limit this depending on its own local conditions. If some Muslims there don't agree with it then they should go to a shariah country in the middle East or elsewhere and carry on with their religion/version of islam .
Any citizen has to respect its countries laws whether you like it or not. A Country's laws should be above any religious laws or whatever. :)
 
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