China punishes official for refuse to smoke near Muslims
A police officer checks the identity card of a
man as security forces keep watch in a street in Kashgar, Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region, China, on March 24, 2017. (REUTERS/Thomas Peter)
Authorities in China’s restive Xinjiang region have punished a
local official for declining to smoke in front of Muslim elders, seeing that as
a sign he was insufficiently committed to the region’s fight against religious
extremism, according to a government report and state media Tuesday
.
Jelil Matniyaz, Communist Party head of a village in Hotan Prefecture, was
demoted for “not daring” to smoke in front of religious figures, said the
report, issued Saturday and reproduced by official newspapers and websites.
Matniyaz, identified as a member of Xinjiang’s indigenous Uighur ethnic
minority, was cited by the report as not having a “resolute political stance.”
The state-run Global Times newspaper on Tuesday quoted other
local officials as saying that government leaders should push back against
rather than comply with religious prohibitions against smoking to demonstrate
their “commitment to secularization.”
The punishment appears to be the latest extreme measure by the
authorities to exert their will in Xinjiang, particularly its southern portion
including Hotan where Uighur culture is strongest. Chinese authorities and the
state-controlled media have increasingly equated religious expression with
extremism in their official rhetoric, partly in response to a bloody insurgency
blamed on Uighur Islamic militants.
The government has argued that its measures, such as prohibiting
women from wearing Islamic veils or men from growing beards, are part of an
effort to roll back dangerous religious fundamentalism. Overseas Uighur
advocate groups say the restrictions have only increased resentment over
heavy-handed Chinese rule and fueled a cycle of radicalization and violence.
Although smoking is not strictly forbidden in many parts of the
Muslim world, it is sometimes discouraged by the more religiously observant.
Ironically, Matniyaz’s punishment comes as health officials are seeking to curb
a deeply ingrained smoking culture in China, where about half of all males
regularly light up.
The Hotan Daily newspaper said a total of 97 local officials
were censured as part of a Communist Party investigation into the conduct of
its own members. The report indicated the probe was personally directed by Chen
Quanguo, the Xinjiang’s regional Communist Party leader and highest ranking
official, who has vowed to crack down on extremism.
Chen was transferred to Xinjiang in August from Tibet, another
region whose non-ethnic Chinese residents have long lived under social,
political and religious restrictions far more severe than in other parts of the
country.
In recent months Chen has ratcheted up security measures and
sent phalanxes of armed paramilitary police and armored tanks rumbling through
Hotan’s streets in large-scale displays of force.
An ancient stop on the Silk Road, Hotan and its surrounding
region have seen an uptick in violence in recent years. State media reported
that a car rammed into a Communist Party building in December and blew up,
resulting in one dead. Months later, eight people died in a knife attack in a
different part of Hotan.
Arab News
Jelil Matniyaz, Communist Party head of a village in Hotan Prefecture, was demoted for “not daring” to smoke in front of religious figures, said the report, issued Saturday and reproduced by official newspapers and websites. Matniyaz, identified as a member of Xinjiang’s indigenous Uighur ethnic minority, was cited by the report as not having a “resolute political stance.”
China punishes official for refuse to smoke near Muslims
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