By Simon Denyer – Chinese
authorities have ordered Muslim shopkeepers and restaurant owners in a
village in its troubled Xinjiang region to sell alcohol and cigarettes,
and promote them in “eye-catching displays,” in an attempt to undermine
Islam’s hold on local residents, Radio Free Asia (RFA) reported. Establishments that failed to comply were threatened with closure and their owners with prosecution.
Facing widespread discontent over its
repressive rule in the mainly Muslim province of Xinjiang, and mounting
violence in the past two years, China has launched a series of “strike
hard” campaigns to weaken the hold of Islam in the western region.
Government employees and children have been barred from attending
mosques or observing the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. In many
places, women have been barred from wearing face-covering veils, and men
discouraged from growing long beards.
In the village of Aktash in southern
Xinjiang, Communist Party official Adil Sulayman, told RFA that many
local shopkeepers had stopped selling alcohol and cigarettes from 2012
“because they fear public scorn,” while many locals had decided to
abstain from drinking and smoking.
The Koran calls the use of “intoxicants” sinful, while some Muslim religious leaders have also forbidden smoking.
Sulayman said authorities in Xinjiang
viewed ethnic Uighurs who did not smoke as adhering to “a form of
religious extremism,” and had issued the order to counter growing
religious sentiment that he said was “affecting stability.”
“We have a campaign to weaken religion here, and this is part of that campaign,” he told the Washington-based news service.
The notice, obtained by RFA and also
posted on Twitter, ordered all restaurants and supermarkets in Aktash to
sell five different brands of alcohol and cigarettes and display them
prominently. “Anybody who neglects this notice and fails to act will see
their shops sealed off, their businesses suspended, and legal action
pursued against them,” the notice said.
Radio Free Asia, which provides some of
the only coverage of events in Xinjiang to escape strict Chinese
government controls, said Hotan prefecture, where Aktash is located, had
become “a hotbed of violent stabbing and shooting incidents between
ethnic Uighurs and Chinese security forces.”
China says Uighur militant groups based
abroad are using the Internet to inspire local Muslims to take up
violent jihad against the state. Critics says China’s long repression of
Uighur rights and nationalist sentiment has pushed people towards Islam
as the only permitted assertion of their community’s identity, and
pushed a minority towards a violent form of Islam. Clumsy attempts to
promote alcohol or forbid beards and veils may prove counterproductive,
they warn.
Sulayman said around 60 shops and
restaurants in the area had complied with the government order, and
there were no reports of protests. But in an unrelated incident in
neighboring Qinghai province on Friday, an angry crowd of Muslims
smashed windows of a supposedly halal store in Xining city, after pork
sausages and ham were found in a delivery van, according to the local government and photographs on social media.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/worldviews/wp/2015/05/05/china-orders-muslim-shopkeepers-to-sell-alcohol-cigarettes-to-weaken-islam/

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