Chinese authorities in the northwestern province of Xinjiang have
banned Muslim officials and students from fasting during the month of
Ramadan, prompting an exiled rights group to warn of new violence.
Guidance
posted on numerous government websites called on Communist Party
leaders to restrict Muslim religious activities during the holy month,
including fasting and visiting mosques.
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.
The
region has been rocked by repeated outbreaks of ethnic violence, but
China denies claims of repression and relies on tens of thousands of
Uighur officials to help it govern the province.
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."
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.
Similar orders on curbing
Ramadan activities were posted on other local government websites, with
the educational bureau of Wensu county urging schools to ensure that
students do not enter mosques during Ramadan.
'Administrative methods'
During Ramadan, Muslims fast from dawn to dusk and strive to be more closer to God, pious and charitable.
An
exiled rights group, the World Uyghur Congress, warned the policy would
force "the Uighur people to resist [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 group spokesman Dilshat Rexit in a statement.
Xinjiang saw
its worst ethnic violence in recent times in July, 2009, when Uighurs
attacked members of the nation's dominant Han ethnic group in the city
of Urumqi, sparking clashes in which 200 people from both sides died,
according to the government.
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