Why China restricts fasting by Xinjiang Muslims during Ramadan

Civil servants, students, and teachers in China's far-western Xinjiang Province have been prevented from fasting during the Islamic holy month.

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Rooney Chen/Reuters/File
An ethnic Uighur woman hugs her son as she stands outside her house with her daughter and neighbors in Xinjiang on July 22, 2012.

In an attempt to clamp down on religious expression, China has restricted fasting during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan in the Xinjiang region, which is largely Muslim.

China has banned civil servants, students, and teachers in the far west region from fasting during Ramadan and ordered restaurants to stay open, Agence France-Presse reported on Thursday.

A notice posted last week on the website of the state Food and Drug Administration in Jinghe county stated that  “food service workplaces will operate normal hours during Ramadan."

Muslims around the world celebrated the start of Ramadan on Thursday. They are required to fast from dawn to dusk, but China’s ruling Communist Party is trying to restrict the practice in Xinjiang.

AFP reports that officials in the region’s Bole county were told not to “engage in fasting, vigils or other religious activities.”

The World Uyghur Congress on Thursday asked China to end its restrictions. The statement adds that such prohibitions "serve only to deepen the division" between Uighurs and the rest of the Chinese community and "fuel further resentment of the state."

The estimated 12 million Uighurs in Xinjiang are Sunni Muslims. They speak a Turkic language, and regard themselves as culturally and ethnically close to Central Asian nations. The region borders Mongolia, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India.

Until recently Xinjiang Province was mostly populated by Uighurs, but development has attracted new residents. In 1949, when the People's Republic of China was founded and the region officially became part of China, the proportion of Han – China's largest ethnic group – in Xinjiang was 6.7 percent. By 2000 the percentage had risen to 40 percent, according to the 2000 census, while Uighurs accounted for about 45 percent.

The influx of Han settlers has created tensions over jobs. Most of the good jobs have gone to Han, leaving Uighurs to do mainly menial tasks and struggle for better working opportunities.

The demographic shift and government repression have triggered waves of violence in the region for more than two decades.

In 2009 more than 200 people were killed during protests in the region, and in the spring of 2014 a series of high-profile attacks killed at least 60 people.

Beijing has since tightened its grip on Islamic practices. Last year it also banned students and civil servants from fasting during Ramadan.

Last May a UN human rights investigator expressed his concern over China’s restrictions on Islam, saying these policies have provoked unrest in Xinjiang.

China argues that it is fighting “religious extremism and terrorism” in the region.

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