CHINA BANS RAMADAN to punish Uighur Muslims for perpetrating so many terrorist attacks on the country during the past few years
Bare Naked Islam
The Chinese
government has banned Muslims in the Xinjiang region from celebrating
Ramadan, a traditional monthlong period of fasting and spiritual
reflection. A spokesman for the World Uighur Congress said authorities encouraged Uighurs to eat free meals, and inspected homes to check whether families were observing the fast.

IB Times
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 extremists with foreign
terrorist ties, according to the Associated Press.
Violent
clashes 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.
During
Ramadan, Muslims around the world fast from dawn to dusk and strive to
be more pious. The commercial affairs bureau of Turfan, an oasis city in
the Taklamakan Desert, said on its website Monday that “civil servants
and students cannot take part in fasting and other religious
activities,” according to the South China Morning Post.
The state-run
Bozhou Radio and TV University warned the ban would also be enforced “on
party members, teachers, and young people from taking part in Ramadan
activities.” “We remind everyone that they are not permitted to observe a
Ramadan fast,” it added.
Xinjiang, also
as known as East Turkestan, is an “autonomous” region in northwestern
China, which is inhabited by the Uighur, a racially distinct Muslim
minority with their own language who demand total independence from
Beijing. There are about 10.2 million Uighurs in Xinjiang, according to a 2002 census (the latest available) conducted by China.
“China taking
these kind of coercive measures, restricting the faith of Uighur, will
create more conflict,” Dilxadi Rexiti, a spokesman for the exiled World
Uyghur Congress, said. “We call on China to ensure religious freedom for
Uighur and stop political repression of Ramadan.”
The Uighur say
they have often been subjected to racial and religious discrimination
by the Chinese government. China accuses Uighur militants of waging a
violent campaign for an independent state.
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