Chinese
authorities have banned women in Urumqi, the capital city of Xinjiang—an
autonomous western region where Muslims account for almost half of the
population—from wearing burqas in public, according to a brief article on a
government-run website, Tianshan News. Local legislators for Urumqi proposed
the ban in December, and now the regional legislature has approved it.
It’s not
clear when the ban on 蒙面罩袍, literally “face-masking robes” will go into effect.
State media said only that it will be implemented after being modified to meet
comments proposed in a meeting over the weekend.
What is
clear, though, is that moves like these are likely to further alienate an
already disenchanted minority group—the Uighurs, who feel their culture and
economy is being overrun by Han Chinese. Ever since a group of Uighur Muslims
went on a killing spree in a train station in Kunming last March, Chinese
officials have ratcheted up restrictions on a group they see as potential
extremists. Xinjiang officials later banned students and civil servants from
fasting for Ramadan, and authorities in the Xinjiang city of Karamy barred
anyone wearing burqas, niqabs, hijabs or simply “large beards” from taking
public buses.
Despite—or
as a result of—these measures, attacks and clashes involving Uighurs have only
increased. Today, police in Shule county, near Kashgar, shot dead six attackers
who were allegedly trying to detonate a series of explosives. Militants
attacked police, residents, and officials in Shache county in August, leaving
almost 100 dead.
The
state-run news agency Xinhua justified the burqa ban by pointing out that
burqas are also banned in France (perhaps not the best example to use, given
the recent extremist attack on French magazine Charlie Hebdo). The Xinhua
report in English said, “Burqas are not traditional dress for Uighur women… The
regulation is seen as an effort to curb growing extremism that forced Uighur
women to abandon their colorful traditional dress and wear black burqas.”
But as long
as Chinese officials tell residents they will be safer if religious expressions
are kept to a minimum, these measures are likely to continue. Zhang Haitao, an
activist based in Urumqi, told Radio Free Asia, “You can’t deprive the freedom
of a small portion of people to maintain the stability of the society. But
here, for a long time, the authorities have been kidnapping public opinion in
the name of stability.”
Credit to Lily Kuo
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