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12 July 2014

China Bans Ramadan: Muslims Punished For Fasting In Holy Month

The Chinese government has banned Muslims in the Xinjiang section from celebrating Ramadan, which is a traditional holy month of fasting and spiritual reflection. A spokesman for the exiled World Uyghur Congress, which promotes democracy, human rights and freedom for the indigenous Uyghur (Uighur) people, said authorities supported Uighurs to eat free meals, and inspected homes to check whether families were observing the fast. Several government agencies and schools posted the ban notices on their websites, saying it was aimed at preventing the institutions from being used to promote religion. Similar bans have been imposed in the past on fasting for Ramadan, which began at sundown Saturday. But this year is unusually sensitive because Xinjiang is under tight security following attacks that the government blames on Muslim revolutionaries with foreign terrorist ties.
The Chinese government has banned Muslims in the Xinjiang section from celebrating Ramadan, which is a traditional holy month of fasting and spiritual reflection.
A spokesman for the exiled World Uyghur Congress, which promotes democracy, human rights and freedom for the indigenous Uyghur (Uighur) people, said authorities supported Uighurs to eat free meals, and inspected homes to check whether families were observing the fast.
Several government agencies and schools posted the ban notices on their websites, saying it was aimed at preventing the institutions from being used to promote religion. Similar bans have been imposed in the past on fasting for Ramadan, which began at sundown Saturday. But this year is unusually sensitive because Xinjiang is under tight security following attacks that the government blames on Muslim revolutionaries with foreign terrorist ties.
Aggressive conflicts between Uighurs and ethnic Chinese has risen in recent years. In July 2009, conflicts between the Han Chinese and the Uighur erupted, killing nearly 200 people in Xinjiang's capital Urumqi.

China accuses Uighur militants of waging a violent campaign for an independent state, and Beijing is often accused of overstressing Uighur extremism to justify its religious onslaught on the Muslim minority.

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