
China has banned civil servants,
students and teachers in its mainly
Muslim Xinjiang region from
fasting during Ramadan and
ordered restaurants to stay open.
Most Muslims are required to fast
from dawn to dusk during the holy
month, which began on Thursday,
but China’s ruling Communist party
is officially atheist and for years
has restricted the practice in
Xinjiang, home to the mostly
Muslim Uighur minority.
“Food service workplaces will
operate normal hours during
Ramadan,” said a notice posted last
week on the website of the state
Food and Drug Administration in
Xinjiang’s Jinghe county.
Officials in the region’s Bole county
were told: “During Ramadan do not
engage in fasting, vigils or other
religious activities,” according to a
local government website report of
a meeting this week.
Each year, the authorities’ attempt
to ban fasting among Uighur
Muslims in Xinjiang receives
widespread criticism from rights
groups.
China imposes restrictions on
Muslim Uighurs
Uighur rights groups say China’s
restrictions on Islam in Xinjiang
have added to ethnic tensions in
the region, where clashes have
killed hundreds in recent years.
China says it faces a “terrorist
threat” in Xinjiang, with officials
blaming “religious extremism” for
the growing violence.
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