Party Vs Faith: China Drafts Restrictions For
All Religions
China
intends to extend aspects of its crackdown on Islam in the north-western
province of Xinjiang to all religions as is evident from the publication of
proposed restrictive guidelines for online religious activity.
The guidelines, according to Chinese Communist Party newspaper Global
Times, would ban online religious services from “inciting subversion, opposing
the leadership of the Communist Party, overthrowing the socialist system and
promoting extremism, terrorism and separatism,” identified as the three evils
China say it is combatting in Xinjiang.
The guidelines would also forbid livestreaming or broadcast of religious
activity, including praying, burning incense, worshipping or baptism ceremonies
in the form of text, photo, audio or video.
The guidelines, published on China’s
legislative information website, are likely to be adopted after
October 9 when the window for public comment closes.
The newspaper quoted Zhu Weiqun, former head of the Ethnic and Religious
Affairs Committee of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political
Consultative Conference as saying that the guidelines were designed to regulate
online religious information and protect the legal rights of religious people
and religious freedom.
“Some organizations, in the name of religion, deliberately exaggerate
and distort religious doctrine online, and some evil forces, such as terrorism,
separatism and religious extremism, and cults, also attempt to expand their
online influences,” Mr. Zhu said.
By applying the guidelines to all religions, the government hopes in
part to take the sting out of an increasing number of media reports as well as
assertions by the United Nations that its policy in Xinjiang involves massive
violation of religious and human rights. China has denied any violations.
While the crackdown on Islam in Xinjiang is the most severe because of
Chinese concerns about Uyghur nationalist aspirations as well as Islamization
and Arabization, references to more conservative, if not ultra-conservative
strands of Islam, and the potential
return to Central Asia of militant Uyghur foreign fighters fleeing
Syria and Iraq, it reflects a wider Chinese effort to control religion.
Similar to Xinjiang where Uyghurs report that mosques are
being destroyed, authorities elsewhere in the country have destroyed
what allegedly were ‘underground churches,’ including a massive
evangelical church in China’s northern Shanxi province that services a
congregation of 50,000.
A rare, mass
protest last month by Hui Muslims, who together with Uyghur’s
account for the bulk of China’s estimated 20 million Muslims, forced local
authorities in the northern Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region to suspend plans to
demolish a newly built mosque.
Former inmates of re-education camps as well as family members of
detainees assert that re-education involves subjecting
religious views to the precepts of the Communist party, putting
allegiance to the party above that of God, and breaking with religious dietary
rules and other Islamic legal requirements.
The drafting of the guidelines come as China is finding it increasingly
difficult to keep a publicity lid on developments in Xinjiang. The Global Times
announcement came a day after Human Rights
Watch issued a damning report and two days after a detailed
expose in The New York Times, part of a flurry of media and academic
reports published despite probable Chinese efforts to suppress critical
reporting where it can.
Independent
Media, publisher of 18 major South African titles with a combined
readership of 25 million, recently refused to
publish a column by foreign affairs columnist Azad Essa on a United
Nations report asserting that up to one million Uyghurs were being detained
in the re-education camps. Mr. Essa was told his column had been discontinued
because of a redesign of the groups’ papers and the introduction of a new
system.
China International Television Corporation (CITVC ) and China-Africa
Development Fund (CADFUND) own a 20
percent stake in Independent Media through Interacom
Investment Holdings Limited, a Mauritius-registered vehicle. There
was no immediate indication that Chinese stakeholders were responsible for the
cancellation of Mr. Essa’s column.
China’s ability to keep its lid on the crackdown is nonetheless
slipping. US officials said this week that the Trump administration, locked into
a trade war with China, was considering
sanctions against Chinese senior officials and companies involved in Xinjiang
in what would be the first US human rights-related measures against the
People’s Republic.
The administration was also looking at ways to limit sales of US
surveillance technology that could assist Chinese security agencies and
companies in turning Xinjiang into a 21st century Orwellian surveillance
state.
Deliberations about possible sanctions gained momentum after US
Republican Senator Marco Rubio, the chair of the congressional committee, called for
the sanctioning of Xinjiang Communist Party Secretary and Politburo member Chen
Quanguo and “all government officials and business entities
assisting the mass detentions and surveillance”. He also demanded that Chinese
security agencies be added “to a restricted end-user list to ensure that
American companies don’t aid Chinese human-rights abuses.”
With the media reporting and UN and US criticism putting pressure on the
Islamic world to speak out, cracks are emerging in its wall of virtually
absolute silence.
Rais Hussin, a supreme council member of Malaysian prime minister
Mahathir Mohamad’s Parti Pribumi Bersatu Malaysia (Bersatu) party and head of
its Policy and Strategy Bureau, cautioned in an editorial this week against deportation of 11 Uyghurs
wanted by China.
“Being friendly to China is a must, as China is a close neighbour of
Malaysia. But it is also on this point that geographical proximity cannot be
taken advantage by China to ride roughshod over everything that Malaysia holds
dear, such as Islam, democracy, freedom of worship and deep respect for every
country’s sovereignty… On its mistreatment of Muslims in Xinjiang almost en
masse, Malaysia must speak up, and defend the most basic human rights of all,”
Mr. Hussin said.
Mr. Hussin’s comments may not be that surprising given that Mr.
Mahathir, since returning to power in May in an upset election, has emerged as
a point man in
a pushback by various nations against Chinese-funded, Belt and Road-related
infrastructure projects that are perceived as risking unsustainable
debt or being potential white elephants.
Mr. Mahathir has, since assuming office, suspended
or cancelled US$26 billion in Chinese-funded projects in Malaysia.
Echoing Mr. Hussin’s statements, Ismailan, a Hui Muslim poet, posted
pictures on Twitter of
Bangladeshi Muslims protesting in the capital Dacca against the crackdown in
Xinjiang.
“They are the first people of Islamic world to stand up for brothers and
sisters in #china.
Muslims, our fate is connected!” Ismailan tweeted, insisting that his
opposition to the crackdown and “the use of concentration camps to solve the
problem” did not
amount to support for Uighur nationalism.
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