Chinese Hui Muslims pray in Beijing. A mosque built by the community in north-west China is under threat of demolition by authorities. AP Photo
Chinese Hui Muslims pray in Beijing. A mosque built by the community in north-west China is under threat of demolition by authorities. AP Photo

Chinese Muslims rally to halt mosque demolition



Thousands of Muslims gathered at a mosque in north-western China on Friday to protest against its planned demolition by the government.

A large crowd of Hui people, a Muslim ethnic minority, began congregating at the towering Grand Mosque in the town of Weizhou on Thursday, residents said.

"People are in a lot of pain," said Ma Sengming, a 72-year-old man who was at the protest from Thursday morning until Friday afternoon. "Many people were crying. We can't understand why this is happening."

Mr Ma said the group shouted "Protect faith in China!" and "Love the country, love the faith!"

The protest comes as religious groups that were largely tolerated in the past have seen their freedoms shrink as the government seeks to "Sinicize" religions by making the faithful prioritise allegiance to the officially atheist ruling Communist Party. Islamic crescents and domes have been stripped from mosques, Christian churches have been shut down and Bibles seized, and Tibetan children have been moved from Buddhist temples to schools.

The residents of Weizhou were alarmed by news that the government was planning to demolish the mosque despite initially approving its construction, which was completed just last year.

The town's Communist Party secretary had even made a congratulatory speech at the site when the mosque's construction began, said Ma Zhiguo, a resident in his late 70s.

The authorities planned to pull down eight of the mosque's nine domes on the grounds that the structure was built larger than permitted, Mr Ma said. But community members were standing their ground, he said.

"How could we allow them to tear down a mosque that is still in good condition?" he said.

He said about 30,000 worshippers attended prayers at the mosque and had funded its construction. Photos online show the mosque to be a palatial white structure, with towering columns, vertical windows and a Chinese national flag erected out front.

Officials in the county and city propaganda offices said they were not aware of the situation. Other local authorities could not immediately be reached for comment.

Ma Sengming said protesters remained at the mosque through the night from Thursday to Friday and were twice visited by a local official who urged them to go home. He said the official did not make any specific promises, but tried to assure the protesters that the government would work with them on the matter.

More than a hundred police officers surrounded the mosque, but did not attempt to stop the protest, according to Mr Ma.

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Public demonstrations are rare in China, where the government is often quick to quash any hint of dissent. Under President Xi Jinping, the Communist Party is cracking down on religious expression and attacking what it calls radical ideas among the country's more than 20 million Muslims.

In the far west region of Xinjiang, following sporadic violent attacks by radical Muslim separatists, hundreds of thousands of members of the Uighur and Kazakh Muslim minorities have been arbitrarily detained in indoctrination camps where they are forced to denounce Islam and profess loyalty to the party.

Compared to those ethnic groups, the Hui are culturally much closer to China's Han majority, similar in appearance and speaking a variation of the mainstream Mandarin language.

According to reports,  authorities recently shut down Hui religious schools and Arabic classes and barred children from participating in Muslim activities.

James Leibold, a scholar of Chinese ethnic policies at Melbourne's La Trobe University, said the proposed demolition of the Weizhou mosque appeared to be part of a recent "far more assimilatory policy" toward ethnic minorities.

"The ultimate agenda is to erode minority identity and create a sense of belonging and connection to Chinese identity and Chinese culture," he said.

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