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CHINA’S UIGHUR REGION TO BAN HIJAB

Rudi Hendrik - Saturday, 13 December 2014 - 11:18 WIB

Saturday, 13 December 2014 - 11:18 WIB

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Scholars warn the heavy-handed measures may anger ordinary Uighurs. (Foto: AFP)
Scholars warn the heavy-handed measures may anger ordinary Uighurs. (Foto: AFP)

Scholars warn the heavy-handed measures may anger ordinary Uighurs. (Foto: AFP)

Xinjiang, 21 Safar 1436/13 December 2014 (MINA) – The capital of China’s restive western region of Xinjiang has issued a law banning veiled robes in public as part of measures taken by Beijing as curbing “Muslim extremism”.

The law in the predominantly Muslim region comes as Beijing intensifies a operation against religious “extremism” that it blames for the violence that has left hundreds dead in the past 20 months, Al Jazeera quoted by Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA) as reporting.

“This fits into the larger pattern, keeping up with the trend in the past five years that has really intensified in the last year by the government to try to forcibly reshape and standardise the type of garment among the Uighur females,” James Leibold, a scholar of ethnic policies at Australia’s La Trobe University, said on Thursday.

Xinjiang is home to the Turkic-speaking Uighur minority Muslims, who have complained of China’s repressive rule and economic disenfranchisement under a government dominated by the majority Han Chinese.

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The new law was passed by the Urumqi legislature’s standing committee on Wednesday but needs endorsement at the regional level before going into effect.

In clamping down on violence in Xinjiang, authorities are targeting what they call manifestations of religious extremism among Uighurs, such as beards and women’s veils.

Scholars say they are not necessarily expressions of extremism but cultural choices by Uighurs, and they warn the heavy-handed measures may anger ordinary Uighurs.

“It polarises the tensions even further, and you get violent push-back,” Leibold said, noting that acts of unveiling Uighur women have been met with resistance in Xinjiang.

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In August, the northern Xinjiang city of Karamay announced that young men with beards and women in burqas or hijabs would not be allowed on public buses, sparked international criticism.

In another public campaign called “Project Beauty”, authorities have banned veils and masks that cover up a woman’s face. Uighur women also are requested to tie headscarves behind their ears, instead of wrapping them around their chins, a custom authorities say is not indigenous to Uighur cultures.

Police also have raided women’s dress shops in Xinjiang and confiscated full-length robes.

Muslims make up about 1.8 percent of the Chinese population. In Xinjiang, non-Muslim ethnic Han Chinese account for 41 percent of the region’s population. (T/P001/R04)

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Mi’raj Islamic News Agency (MINA)

 

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