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The Chinese military is set to add more than 1,000 nuclear warheads to its arsenal by 2035, according to a new study by ...
30/11/2022

The Chinese military is set to add more than 1,000 nuclear warheads to its arsenal by 2035, according to a new study by the Department of Defense. The DoD says the Chinese nuclear buildup, along with other military advancements, is to prevent the U.S. from intervening as China asserts control over the Indo-Pacific region.

According to the DoD’s annual report to congress on the Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China (PRC), the Chinese military has about 400 operational nuclear warheads. The DoD report said that if China sticks to its current timeline to almost fully modernize its military by 2035, it will likely have about 1,500 warheads by 2035.

In addition to China more than tripling its number of nuclear warheads, the DoD said China is investing in and expanding its number of land, sea and air-based platforms for launching nuclear weapons.

While China could have about 1,500 nuclear warheads by 2035, the U.S. would still outmatch it with its current nuclear arsenal. According to

According to a June report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), Russia leads the world with an estimated 5,977 nuclear weapons. The U.S. had the second largest nuclear weapon inventory, with 5,428 weapons.

In addition to its nuclear weapons buildup, the DoD report says China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) is configuring its forces to assert control over Taiwan and counter a U.S. intervention on Taiwan’s behalf.

“The PLA is preparing for a contingency to unify Taiwan with the PRC by force if perceived as necessary by Beijing, while simultaneously deterring, delaying, or denying any intervention by a third-party, such as the United States and/or other like-minded partners, on Taiwan’s behalf,” the report reads.

The DoD report describes a range of options and capabilities China could take to assert control over Taiwan, even without a full scale invasion of the main Taiwanese island.

“The PLA is capable of various amphibious operations short of a full-scale invasion of Taiwan,” the report reads. “With few overt military preparations beyond routine training, the PRC could launch an invasion of small Taiwan-occupied islands in the South China Sea such as Pratas or Itu Aba. A PLA invasion of a medium-sized, better-defended island such as Matsu or Kinmen is within the PLA’s capabilities.”

The Chinese military could also use an aerial or maritime blockade to cut Taiwan off from its vital imports and force the island to submit to Chinese control.

For now, the DoD report states a Chinese invasion of Taiwan through a large scale amphibious landing would be “one of the most complicated and difficult military operations.”

“An attempt to invade Taiwan would likely strain PRC’s armed forces and invite international intervention,” the report states. “Combined with inevitable force attrition, complexity of urban warfare, and potential insurgency, these factors make an amphibious invasion of Taiwan a significant political and military risk for Xi Jinping and the Chinese Communist Party, even assuming a successful landing and breakout.”

During a Tuesday press briefing, Pentagon Press Secretary Air Force Gen. Pat Ryder said “we don’t believe that an invasion [of Taiwan] is imminent.”

The Chinese military is set to add more than 1,000 nuclear warheads to its arsenal by 2035, according to a new study by the Department of D...

A Washington D.C. jury on Tuesday found Oath Keepers founder Elmer Stewart Rhodes III, and the leader of the group’s Flo...
30/11/2022

A Washington D.C. jury on Tuesday found Oath Keepers founder Elmer Stewart Rhodes III, and the leader of the group’s Florida chapter Kelly Meggs, guilty of seditious conspiracy for their actions on Jan. 6, 2021, when demonstrators entered the U.S. Capitol and delayed certification of the 2020 election results.

Rhodes and Meggs were on trial, along with Kenneth Harrelson, Jessica Watkins, and Thomas Caldwell, for seditious conspiracy and other charges related to the events of Jan. 6, 2021. Harrelson, Watkins and Caldwell were all found not guilty of the seditious conspiracy charge but were found guilty on other charges.

Harrelson was found guilty of obstruction of an official proceeding, conspiracy to prevent an officer from discharging duties, and tampering with documents or proceedings.

Watkins was found guilty of obstruction of an official proceeding, interfering with law enforcement officers during a civil disorder and conspiracy to prevent an officer from discharging duties.

Caldwell was found guilty of obstruction of an official proceeding, and tampering with documents or proceedings.

In addition to the seditious conspiracy charge, the jury also found Rhodes guilty of obstruction of an official proceeding and tampering with documents and proceedings. The jury also found Meggs guilty of conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding, obstruction of an official proceeding, conspiracy to prevent an officer from discharging duties, and tampering with documents or proceedings.

During the trial, prosecutors presented text messages between Rhodes and other members of the Oath Keepers organization, including one in which Rhodes said then-President Donald Trump “needs to know that if he fails to act, then we will.”

During the trial, Rhodes testified that rather than physically assaulting the Capitol building, he was instead focused on Trump’s legal options to contest the 2020 election results and he believed that Trump could invoke the Insurrection Act as a legitimate legal challenge to the 2020 election results. Rhodes said his plans in Washington D.C. that day never involved going into the capitol to disrupt the congressional procedure for certifying elections.

During the trial a prosecution witness government named Graydon Young — an Oath Keepers member who had pleaded guilty to conspiracy — testified that he knew of no plan to enter the Capitol building and never received an order from Rhodes to enter the building. Young also described his decision to enter the building as “spontaneous.”

Rhodes did not enter the Capitol building, but did arrive outside the building later on in the protest.

The government argued that some Oath Keepers were hanging back from the protesting and rioting inside the capitol as a quick reaction force (QRF). The U.S. Department of Justice said “According to the government’s evidence, the QRF teams were prepared to rapidly transport fi****ms and other weapons into Washington, D.C., in support of operations aimed at using force to stop the lawful transfer of presidential power.”

Each of the five defendants were found guilty of at least one offense with a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. No sentencing date has been set.

A Washington D.C. jury on Tuesday found Oath Keepers founder Elmer Stewart Rhodes III, and the leader of the group’s Florida chapter Kelly...

Dr. Anthony Fauci said the U.S. is “certainly” still in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic that began nearly three years...
30/11/2022

Dr. Anthony Fauci said the U.S. is “certainly” still in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic that began nearly three years ago, even as cases and deaths are almost as low as they’ve ever been since March 2020.

Fauci, a top public health official who became a household name for his prominent role during the pandemic, made the remark Sunday on NBC News’ “Meet the Press.”

“I think you just need to look at the numbers,” he said. “We’re still having between three- and 400 deaths per day, so I think the idea that, ‘Forget it, this is over’ – it isn’t. We’re going into the winter right now. We have the wherewithal to mitigate against another surge. It’s up to us to make sure that doesn’t happen.”

Since the summer, weekly COVID deaths in the U.S. have hovered around 2,500 – which, over a seven-day week, breaks down to just over 357 deaths a day, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

That’s almost as low as deaths have ever been since the pandemic began. The lowest weekly total recorded since the pandemic’s first wave came during a deep lull in July 2021, with 1,678 deaths in a week – about 240 per day.

Fauci’s statement is the latest in a series of mixed signals from the government about the state of the pandemic as an increasing share of Americans puts it in the rearview mirror, as indicated by a recent Axios-Ipsos poll.

In April, as deaths were coming down from their second-highest peak, Fauci said that the U.S. was “out of the pandemic phase” and “transitioning” to a point where people can “learn how to live with the virus.” But after Biden declared in September that “the pandemic is over,” Fauci said still not enough people were vaccinated for society to coexist with the virus.

According to CDC data, 68.8 percent of the U.S. population has been fully vaccinated, and 12.1 percent has up-to-date boosters.

During his “Meet the Press” appearance Sunday, Fauci called the booster rate “frustrating,” adding, “We’ve got to do better than that.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci said the U.S. is “certainly” still in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic that began nearly three years ago, even as cases...

A man caught viral attention recently after he filmed himself following a group of U.S. Army soldiers around a mall, hur...
29/11/2022

A man caught viral attention recently after he filmed himself following a group of U.S. Army soldiers around a mall, hurling racist remarks at the troops and asking if they had were exporting “so**my,” among other comments.

The incident likely took place at a mall in Poland, as the man referred to the country during his video. A Twitter user who identified himself as an Army officer, shared the video and commended the soldiers for maintaining their composure throughout the incident.

Viewer discretion for these videos is advised:

The second part of the video includes use of extremely racist terms, so watch with caution. But rather than focusing on the words, watch the Soldiers.

/2 pic.twitter.com/eEHia4rD1b

— Havoc Six () November 23, 2022

The video begins as the man who filmed it approached the group of four soldiers, asking, “Are you guys Americans?” The man then asks, “Are you guys here to spread so**my or what?” The group of soldiers initially just laughs off the question and walks away, but the man filming continues to follow the soldiers, asking, “Isn’t [so**my] what America’s number one export is?”

As the man continues to follow the soldiers, he continues to ask the soldiers about the top U.S. export.

“Is it George Floyd culture?” the filmmaker asks, referring to a black man who died in Minneapolis police custody in May of 2020.

Later on, the filmmaker asks, “What do you guys think about your health secretary being a f-cking tranny,” referring to assistant U.S. Health Secretary Rachel Levine, a biological male who identifies as a woman.

“What do you guys think about a country that has — there’s no meaning to being a citizen, like any Mexican crossing the border is literally one of you, what do you guys think?”

The filmmaker then asks, “Are you guy’s here to spread the a**l sex?” As one of the soldier’s again laughs at the question, the filmmaker says, “What, isn’t that what you learn in your training? You guys literally have f-cking transsexuals that wear dresses that are your superiors.”

Later on in the interaction, the man filming focuses in on the two soldiers who are the slowest in walking away from him, a white man and a black man. The filmmaker says “keep Poland white, okay?” and as the black soldier looks back, his white teammate puts his hand on his back and encourages him forward despite the remark. The filmmaker then says “stay away from those white women, cause miscegenation used to be a crime in your country.”

The filmmaker appears to break off from the soldiers for a moment and the video is clipped. At some point later, it appears that one of the soldiers says something at the filmmaker who then turns back to the soldiers and begins jogging back towards them, saying, “What are you going to do? You guys are here to spread some f*cking homo worship and you get called out on it, show us what a tough guy you are.”

The pair of soldiers continue to urge each other to walk away from their provocateur and leave the mall. In one of his last barbs at the soldiers, the man filming says, “You’re in a white country now, we don’t worship n—ers and Mexicans.” On that remark, the white soldier appeared to turn back toward the man filming, but his black teammate kept urging him to walk away.

In a statement to the Daily Mail, Army spokesman Lt. Col. Terence Kelley said, “The U.S. Army expects all Soldiers to abide by the Army Values, on duty and off. We commend all Soldiers who demonstrate discipline and restraint when confronted by provocative behavior.”

The exact identity of the mall provocateur is unknown but Meaww.com reported he may have been identified as Jon Minadeo Jr., an American citizen whom the publication identified as a neo-Nazi. The Times of Israel reported Minadeo was arrested in Poland in September for holding up a sign outside the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp that read ““Greenblatt suck 6 million dicks,” referring to Anti-Defamation League (ADL) CEO Jonathan Greenblatt.

A man caught viral attention recently after he filmed himself following a group of U.S. Army soldiers around a mall, hurling racist remarks...

Iran is threatening its national soccer team with dire consequences if players don’t “behave” at the FIFA World Cup in Q...
29/11/2022

Iran is threatening its national soccer team with dire consequences if players don’t “behave” at the FIFA World Cup in Qatar after they appeared to signal solidarity with Iran’s ongoing protests last week, a source told CNN.

The anonymous source said Iran’s players were summoned by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, a powerful branch of the country’s military, and told their families would suffer “violence and torture” if they crossed the regime again.

The grim warning comes after Iran’s players remained silent during their national anthem before their first game last Monday. That was widely interpreted as support for a massive wave of protests back home that has been described as the most significant challenge to the Iranian regime in decades.

Iran players sang the national anthem at their next game four days later, CNN reported. They’ll play their third game, against the USA, Tuesday afternoon.

CNN’s source said dozens of IRGC officers are monitoring the country’s players, who are kept in a tight social bubble among themselves.

The Portuguese coach of Iran’s team, Carlos Queiroz, met separately with IRGC officers after they threatened the team, CNN reported. The outcome of that meeting isn’t clear, but Queiroz previously said “the players are free to protest,” as reported by the Athletic.

The source also said Iran packed the stands in its second game, against Wales, with “hundreds” of actors paid to “create a false sense of support and favor amongst the fans.”

“For the next game against the U.S., the regime is planning to significantly increase the number of actors into the thousands,” the source said.

The Iran protests broke out in September after a 22-year-old woman, accused of improperly wearing her hijab, died in the hands of the country’s morality police. Now in their third month, the protests have spread across the nation despite a crackdown that has seen the state use live ammunition, NPR reported.

Iran recently acknowledged that more than 300 people have been killed in the protests, NPR reported.

Iran is threatening its national soccer team with dire consequences if players don’t “behave” at the FIFA World Cup in Qatar after they app...

Protests and riots sprung up across cities China in recent days as people are reportedly demanding an end to the country...
28/11/2022

Protests and riots sprung up across cities China in recent days as people are reportedly demanding an end to the country’s strict COVID-19 lockdown measures and even calling for Xi Jinping and other leaders of the ruling Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to resign. These demonstrations against CCP rule and the strict COVID-19 restrictions come as a potential challenge to Xi’s consolidation of power in China’s campaign to overtake the U.S. as the dominant world power.

U.S. conservative political commentator Jack Posobiec shared a video purporting to show the doors of the apartment building were wired shut.

“Families in a hi-rise in China were locked into their apartments as their building caught fire. Urumqi, in Xinjiang Province,” Posobiec tweeted. “They burned alive as they couldn’t escape and no one could get to them in time. This is directly on the CCP and Xi’s Zero-Covid lockdown strategy.”

Families in a hi-rise in China were locked into their apartments as their building caught fire. Urumqi, in Xinjiang Province

They burned alive as they couldn't escape and no one could get to them in time

This is directly on the CCP and Xi's Zero-Covid lockdown strategy pic.twitter.com/AWQ4oJA7Qg

— Jack Posobiec () November 28, 2022

The BBC reported protests began in the northwest Chinese city of Urumqi after 10 people died in a fire at an apartment building. The BBC reported people had struggled to escape because they were locked inside their homes as part of the strict COVID-19 lockdown measures.

The Chinese state-run Global Times reported local government officials had denied the claims that doors in the Urumqi apartment building were locked. The state-run CGTN news outlet reported local authorities had vowed to investigate the apartment fire and “hold those suspected of dereliction of duty accountable.”

Following the apartment building fire, additional videos began to appear online, purporting to show people clashing with Chinese authorities in Xinjiang.

The real China!!!People in Xinjiang have been quarantined for more than 100 days please help Chinesewe are so hopeless. #新疆疫情 #新疆火灾 pic.twitter.com/cSRbojvJY0

— explicit. () November 25, 2022

One Twitter user said, “The CCP is going to have to crack down hard in order to survive, similar to the Tiananmen square massacre in 1989. These videos are happening all over China. Police arrest residents in China’s Xinjiang province. They smash this guys cellphone for recording.”

The CCP is going to have to crack down hard in order to survive, similar to the Tiananmen square massacre in 1989. These videos are happening all over China.

Police arrest residents in China's Xinjiang province. They smash this guys cellphone for recording

sound … pic.twitter.com/GmcChiqIo5

— Wall Street Silver () November 27, 2022

On the other side of China, in the eastern coastal city of Shanghai, more protests and riots had reportedly broken out.

“Protesters in Shanghai shouting ‘step down CCP, step down Xi Jinping.’ Apparently there’s a lot of anger over the fire in Urumqi,” one Twitter user said.

Protesters in Shanghai shouting “step down CCP, step down Xi Jinping.” Apparently there’s a lot of anger over the fire in Urumqi. pic.twitter.com/oqu14E4MxF

— China Uncensored () November 27, 2022

“I’ve lived in China for 30 years, and I’ve never seen such a brazenly open and sustained expression of rage against the PRC govt,” one Twitter user said, adding that the Chinese social media site WeChat “is exploding with protest videos and furious vitriol, and civil disobedience is becoming rampant. This is a serious test of CCP governance.”

Shanghai tonight. pic.twitter.com/zjbH2rBeRg

— Miranda Wang () November 26, 2022

Emily Feng, a journalist in China for NPR, tweeted a video of protests Shanghai and tweeted, “Seemingly spontaneous protest converging again at Urumqi Road in Shanghai, despite heavy police presence. People are shouting ‘let them go 放人!’ Apparently in reference to those arrested at previous protests.”

Seemingly spontaneous protest converging again at Urumqi Road in Shanghai, despite heavy police presence. People are shouting “let them go 放人!” Apparently in reference to those arrested at previous protests. pic.twitter.com/JjOvtcqFnr

— Emily Feng 冯哲芸 () November 27, 2022

Protests and have also been reported in the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu.

La police chinoise charge la foule et procède à des interpellations ce soir à Chengdu pic.twitter.com/YJ8PoTrT8t

— Anonyme Citoyen () November 27, 2022

Protests have also spread to the Chinese capitol city of Beijing.

David Rennie, a columnist and Beijing bureau chief for The Economist tweeted, “130am in Beijing. Still going. Cries of ‘we want freedom, we want human rights.'”

Police reinforcements pic.twitter.com/qLaHc7KQQz

— David Rennie 任大伟 () November 27, 2022

Another Twitter user alleged that Chinese government authorities have been using a COVID passport app system against protesters, marking those protesters for quarantine in the app system. The Twitter same user also showed video footage purporting to show factory workers at an unspecified location in China fighting with police and throwing barricades at officers.

JUST IN – Chinese government remotely switched all the protesters's COVID passports to code red.

Meanwhile Chinese iPhone factory workers clash with police as COVID protest turns violent. https://t.co/1u3xnTJ6wR pic.twitter.com/5D3aT09EzP

— Songpinganq () November 23, 2022

Another video, reportedly taken in Guangzhou, also showed a riot where people were throwing barricades at Chinese authorities. It is not immediately clear if this video is from the same event as the one involving factory workers.

There were also angry protests in Guangzhou again last night. pic.twitter.com/mAPiIT6xMM

— 247ChinaNews () November 25, 2022

It is not immediately clear what percentage of the Chinese population is joining in these protests and riots, in a country of approximately 1.4 billion people.

The protests come just weeks after Chinese president and CCP leader Xi Jinping was selected by a CCP party congress to a third term as the party’s leader. Xi’s third term as the CCP party leader paves the way for him to take on a third term as president of China. China had a two-term limit for its presidency, but Xi helped scrap that limit in 2018. With that limit gone, Xi could potentially rule indefinitely.

During that same CCP party congress, Xi touted his strict “COVID Zero” lockdown policies and avoided acknowledging any economic or social costs from the strict measures. In September, the Financial Times reported China’s economic growth had fallen behind that of the rest of Asia for the first time since 1990, in large part due to it’s strict lockdown measures.

Protests and riots sprung up across cities China in recent days as people are reportedly demanding an end to the country’s strict COVID-19 ...

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.Authorities in the southwester...
27/11/2022

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

Authorities in the southwestern Chinese region of Guangxi have jailed a prominent critic of the ruling Communist Party for four-and-a-half years after he spoke out about a woman found chained in an outbuilding in Jiangsu earlier this year, RFA has learned.

The Guigang Municipal People’s Court on Nov. 20 handed down a four-year, six-month jail term to Lu Huihuang — who has previously also called for democratic reforms — after finding him guilty of “incitement to subvert state power,” the rights group Weiquanwang reported.

“[Lu] refused to accept the judgment and has expressed his intention to appeal,” the report said, describing Lu as a “freelance and online writer, a dissident citizen, rights activist and political prisoner.”

He was taken away from his home in Nanning city by police from Guigang on Feb. 18, 2022 “for calling on the ruling Chinese Communist Party to thoroughly investigate the case of the chained woman in Xuzhou,” the site reported.

Lu is currently being held in the Guigang Detention Center in Batang township, Guigang, it said.

Guangxi resident Nong Dingcai said Lu’s friends had been informed of his sentence, and of his intention to appeal, by the detention center.

“The detention center called some of his friends in China, saying that Lu Huihuang had been sentenced to four-and a half years,” Nong told RFA.

“The charge was ‘incitement to subvert state power.’ He has requested an appeal.”

Nong said not all of the information about Lu’s case has been released, and his family members are under close surveillance.

Authorities have yet to release any official information about Lu’s case. In China, the crime of “incitement to subvert state power” is considered confidential and related trials are held in secret.

Suggesting democratic reforms

According to Weiquanwang, Lu has written a number of essays and open letters to the Communist Party leadership since 2013, proffering suggestions on democratic reforms to China’s political system.

“[The articles] suggested that the Communist Party carry out democratic and constitutional reforms as soon as possible, and found resonance with people online,” it said, adding that the articles were extensively forwarded and read via groups on the QQ and WeChat social media platforms, as well as being published on overseas websites like Beijing Spring and China Labor Watch.

It said Lin had previously served a two-and-a-half year jail term in Guangdong’s Conghua Prison, during which he was tortured with electric shocks, kept in manacles and forced to sleep on the floor for long periods of time because he refused to plead guilty or make a “confession.”

Fellow dissident Lin Shengliang said Lu’s criticism of the case of the chained woman was likely just an excuse for the authorities to re-detain him.

“It’s thought that Lu Huihuang’s secret detention was linked to the case of the chained woman, because he published too many posts about it on his group chats,” Lin told RFA. “But given the harshness of the sentence, there were probably other baseless accusations too.”

He said supporters who had tried to visit Lu’s parents had also been detained.

“Given that his parents are under security measures, a lot of people who went to visit them were immediately taken away by local police and village officials,” Lin said.

He said Lu has been unable to hire an independent lawyer, because his family are being “cooperative” with the authorities, which generally means agreeing to have him represented by a government-appointed lawyer.

“Lu Huihuang actually asked a prison guard to get a message to me asking me to help him find an attorney, but the local state security police didn’t allow us to mail the instruction letter to Lu Huihuang so he could sign it,” Lin said.

“We don’t know what is happening with him, how legal the investigation, prosecution or trial were, nor whether he was tortured.”

New era of authoritarian rule

Lin said the authorities have entered a new era of authoritarian rule.

“Under the new authoritarianism, the government uses a powerful state machine to crush dissidents,” he said. “As the social and political environment continues to deteriorate, the crime of inciting subversion of state power will be more widely and freely used by China’s powerful agencies.”

In December 2021, authorities in Guangxi handed down a three-year jail term to outspoken rights lawyer Chen Jiahong for “subversion,” amid fears for his safety in detention. Chen had been a prominent critic of the government.

On China’s tightly controlled internet, Chen was known for inscribing the slogan “Set up an assassination detail, liquidate this evil bureaucracy and promote democracy” in Chinese calligraphy and posting it to social media.

Fellow Guangxi lawyer Qin Yongpei was detained in early November 2021 by the Nanning municipal police department during a raid on his Baijuying legal consultancy company, after speaking out many times about misconduct and injustices perpetrated by police and local judicial officials.

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission. Authorities in the southwestern Chinese region...

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.Most Uyghurs in Xinjiang have ...
27/11/2022

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

Most Uyghurs in Xinjiang have not returned to mosques that Chinese authorities have reopened for limited religious services in response to heavy international criticism of repressive policies targeting the mostly Muslim ethnic group, sources inside and outside the country say.

Authorities in the restive northwestern region began scaling back their crackdown on religion in early 2020 by reopening some mosques they previously shut down during the height of religious persecution in 2017.

The change occurred after the United States and the parliaments of some Western countries declared China’s repression of the Uyghurs, including arbitrary detainment and serious human rights violations, amounted to genocide and crimes against humanity. In late August, the United Nations human rights chief issued a report into the accusations and concluded that the repression “may constitute international crimes, in particular crimes against humanity.”

Despite the “softened” stance toward Islam in Xinjiang, most Uyghurs who lost confidence in China’s religious policy that officially recognizes five religions, including Islam, because of the crackdown, have refrained from returning to the reopened houses of worship.

“After being criticized by the international community over the concentration camps, China defended itself by partially relaxing religious restrictions,” said Ilshat Hassan Kokbore, a political a**lyst based in the United States and vice chairman of the executive committee of the World Uyghur Congress.

“However, since those who were taken to the camps have not been released yet, the residents did not believe in this ‘softening’ of the policy,” he said.

Fear that religion could be used to drive separatism

The Chinese government recognizes five faiths —Buddhism, Catholicism, Daoism, Protestantism and Islam — but has long feared that foreigners could use religious practice to induce separatism.

Under President Xi Jinping, the Chinese Communist Party has focused on Sinicizing religions to conform with the doctrines of the officially atheist party and the customs of the majority Han Chinese population.

But Beijing views expressions of Islam in Xinjiang as extremist because of former independence movements and occasional violent outbursts in the region.

In 2017, Xinjiang’s government implemented an anti-extremism law and began arbitrarily detaining Uyghurs in “re-education” centers in an effort to eliminate “religious extremism” and “terrorism.”

Authorities also assigned party cadres to stay in Uyghur homes to monitor the behavior of the inhabitants and destroyed many mosques across the region, claiming they were structurally unsafe. They also hauled away Muslim imams and religious scholars as part of the crackdown.

Right to practice

But there have been some attempts to loosen controls.

In January 2020, authorities Korla, known as Ku’erle in Chinese and the second-largest city in Xinjiang, issued a document informing residents that they had the right to practice Islam. They then tried to persuade them to return to local mosques, said a policeman who declined to be named because he is not authorized to speak with the media.

A member of a mosque management committee told residents that if they believed in Islam, they could perform regular religious activities at a local mosque that can accommodate 100-150 people, he said.

“The residents said they believed in the faith, and some signed their signatures on a document,” the officer told RFA.

But only four or five Uyghur pensioners dependent on government assitance are attending prayer services there, he said.

In Hotan prefecture, known as Hetian in Chinese, authorities have touted upgrades to existing mosques to encourage Uyghurs to return to them.

“Sunny, spacious and clean”

At the Jeymehel Mosque, the prefecture’s propaganda department has used loudspeakers to try to attract worshipers.

The mosque was built in 1848 and was furnished with an air conditioner, water cooler, storage spaces for shoes and other personal items and a fire extinguisher when it was rebuilt in 2019, according to the department’s pre-recorded announcement.

“Our mosque conditions are the best,” said the announcement as heard on a Xinjiang TV broadcast. “It is sunny, spacious, and clean, and the environment is comfortable. This renovation pleased our worshipers,” says a department announcement over loudspeakers with the sounds of Quranic verse in the background.

In Kashgar prefecture, known as Kashi in Chinese and an area heavily populated by Uyghurs,

authorities turned some mosques into centers disseminating political propaganda, locals told RFA in a 2017 report. They required caretakers of mosques to fly China’s national flag atop the buildings and ordered them to remove Islamic inscription from walls and replace them with large red banners expressing love for China and the CCP.

Authorities previously shut down three mosques in the Chinese Bazar neighborhood of Ghulja, known as Yining in Chinese, and sentenced seven members of Tahtiyun Mosque to prison, sources there said.

Severe clampdown in past

Religious suppression has been severe in Ghulja, recently complicated by a strict lockdown amid outbreaks of the coronavirus this August and September that in some cases led to the deaths of about 90 from starvation or lack of access to medicine in the city of roughly a half-million mainly Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims.

When the bodies were collected, authorities didn’t inform the families of the deceased about whether they handled their remains according to Islamic burial rituals, according to an earlier RFA report.

Authorities demolished a mosque on Saman Street and locked up another mosque in Ghulja’s Tahtiyun neighborhood and removed its minaret, according to a retired police officer from the Ili Kazakh (Yili Hasake) autonomous prefecture, where Ghulja is located.

They also closed the Tung’gan Mosque, a Chinese Hui Muslim structure, where seven clergymen, including the imam and muezzin, were imprisoned.

A Chinese Hui Muslim imam from Uch’un Hui village in Ghulja was appointed to hold Friday prayer services at a mosque built a decade ago in the town of Qarayaghach, said a security official from the community.

The locals recruited a Chinese Hui Muslim because no Uyghur imams could be found, residents said.

Differing treatment

The Chinese government’s treatment of Muslims differs according to ethnic and geographic lines, sources in the country say. Hui Muslims, who are perceived as less of a threat, are given greater leeway than Uyghurs to practice Islam, such as fasting during the holy month of Ramadan and wearing headscarves, they say.

“The worshipers pray only on Friday [when] they open the mosque,” said the village security chief, who declined to be named for safety reasons.

Four elderly Uyghur residents who receive government pensions went there to worship but had difficulty understanding the imam’s sermon because of his poor Uyghur language skills, which resulted in some words and phrases being almost comically misspoken, village residents said.

But the elders dared not laugh at or express dissatisfaction with him, they said.

One villager said the mosque remains closed on days other than Friday.

“On other days, the security guards watch the mosque,” the person said, adding that the mosque’s loudspeakers are no longer used to call worshipers to prayer, except on Fridays.

This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission. Most Uyghurs in Xinjiang have not returned to ...

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