http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/09/08/asia/ramadan.php


Local Chinese governments impose rules for Ramadan 

By Edward Wong Published: September 8, 2008


BEIJING: Local governments in a Muslim desert region in western China have 
imposed strict limits on religious practices during the traditional Muslim 
fasting month of Ramadan, which began last week, according to the Web sites of 
four of those governments.

The rules include prohibiting women from wearing veils and men from growing 
beards, as well as barring government officials from observing Ramadan. One 
town, Yingmaili, mandates that local officials check up on mosques at least 
twice a week during Ramadan.

The local governments administer areas in the western part of Xinjiang, a vast 
autonomous region that is home to the Uighurs, a Muslim Turkic people who often 
chafe under rule by the ethnic Han Chinese.

In August, a wave of attacks swept through Xinjiang, the largest surge of 
violence in the region in years. Some local officials blamed the instability on 
separatist groups, and the central government dispatched security forces to the 
area.

The limits on religious practices put in place by the local governments appear 
to be part of the broader security crackdown. The areas affected by the new 
rules are near Kuqa, a town struck by multiple bombings on Aug. 10. 

The Web site of the town of Yingmaili lists nine rules put in place to 
"maintain stability during Ramadan."

They include barring teachers and students from observing Ramadan, prohibiting 
retired government officials from entering mosques and requiring men to shave 
off beards and women to take off veils. Mosques may not let people from outside 
the town stay overnight, and restaurants must maintain normal hours of 
business. (Many restaurants close during daytime hours over Ramadan because of 
the fasting, which is supposed to last from sunrise to sunset. Muslims 
observing Ramadan typically eat substantial meals at night.)

In nearby Xinhe County, the government has decreed that Communist Party 
members, civil servants and retired officials not observe Ramadan, enter 
mosques or take part in any religious activities during the month. Worshipers 
cannot make pilgrimages to tombs, so as to "avoid any group event that might 
harm social stability," according to the Xinhe government's Web site.

In addition, children and students cannot be forced to attend religious 
activities, and women cannot be forced to wear veils.

County rules also stress the need to maintain a strict watch over migrant 
workers and visitors from outside. Companies and families who have workers or 
visitors from outside the county are required to register the outsiders with 
the nearest police station and have the outsiders sign an agreement "on 
maintaining social stability."

Some of those rules are similar to ones implemented in Beijing just before the 
Olympic Games started in early August.

Shayar County, which includes the town of Yingmaili, said on its Web site that 
migrants must register with the police, and that any missionary work by 
outsiders is banned. (Even outside Ramadan, China is wary of missionaries doing 
any kind of work in the country.)

The city of Artux is also preventing its teachers and students from observing 
Ramadan. As a result, schools have to keep serving food and water, city 
authorities said. As with the other governments, the overall goal is "to 
maintain social stability during Ramadan."

In some parts of the world, militants see Ramadan as a good time to carry out 
attacks because they believe achieving martyrdom during the holy fasting month 
is an especially sacred act.

Religious extremists in Iraq, for example, have carried out waves of bombings 
during Ramadan in recent years. But the Chinese government has not presented 
any evidence showing that separatists in Xinjiang might do the same this year.

Huang Yuanxi contributed research.

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