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Amid Xinjiang crisis, Chinese authorities are now targeting tiny Muslim community in Hainan province

Just Earth News | @justearthnews | 29 Sep 2020, 11:38 am Print

Amid Xinjiang crisis, Chinese authorities are now targeting tiny Muslim community in Hainan province

Beijing: The Chinese government's religious crackdown on a minor community has now reached Sanya city in Hainan province, located almost 12,000 km from the controversial Xinjiang region where the atrocities on the Uyghur Muslims have already earned global attention.

The little-known Utsuls community are now becoming the latest target of the Chinese regime, media reports said.

According to media reports, the government has banned traditional dress in schools and government offices, targeting the community members.

Communist Party documents also suggest the authorities will increase their surveillance of residents in Muslim neighbourhoods to “resolve problems” and tighter restrictions on religious and “Arabic” architecture will be imposed, reports South China Morning Post.

An order banning the hijab from schools prompted protests from schools in Utsul neighbourhoods earlier this month, and pictures and videos circulating on Chinese social media showed a group of girls wearing headscarves reading from text books outside Tianya Utsul primary school while surrounded by police officers, the newspaper reported.

“The official line is that no ethnic minority can wear traditional garments on school grounds but other ethnic minorities [in Sanya] don’t wear traditional garments in their daily life so it’s makes no difference to them but to us the hijab is an integral part of our culture, if we take it off it’s like stripping off our clothes,” an Utsul community worker, who requested anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter, told the news paper.

The treatment of the Chinese government towards the Uyghur people has already drawn global attention.

Uyghur Muslims are a Turkic minority ethnic group originating from and culturally affiliated with the general region of Central and East Asia. It is now widely publicized that their human rights are crushed by China and they were sent to "re-education camps" by the communist regime in Beijing.