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China cracks down on Ramadan fasting, prompting activist boycott of Chinese products

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China cracks down on Ramadan fasting, prompting activist boycott of Chinese products

By Tracey Shelton and Iris Zhao
Posted 17 hours ago, updated15 hours ago

https://www.google.com/amp/amp.abc.net.au/article/11082244
11087356-3x2-xlarge.jpg

IMAGEMuslims traditionally fast from dawn to dusk and pray five times a day during Ramadan.(Reuters: Damir Sagolj)
With Muslims around the world observing the holy month of Ramadan, Chinese authorities have again launched a crackdown on fasting and religious practices by Islamic minorities.

Key points:

  • Fasting and other displays of religious affiliation are viewed as "signs of extremism"
  • Chinese authorities have long viewed organised religion as a threat to party loyalty
  • Mass surveillance and detentions have intensified over the past three years in Xinjiang
The restrictions are particularly enforced in the Muslim-majority Western province of Xinjiang, where Chinese authorities frequently stay at the homes of Muslim families to suppress religious activities, according to the Human Rights Watch and activists.

During Ramadan, Muslims traditionally fast from dawn to dusk and refrain from smoking and other vices.

Amnesty International said in a report released late last week Chinese authorities view Ramadan fasting — along with other displays of religious affiliation including beards, headscarves, regular prayers and avoidance of alcohol — as a "sign of extremism".

China's war on religion

Banned bibles, burnt crosses, and re-education camps — denomination aside, religion is a dangerous pursuit in Xi Jinping's China in 2018.

Read more

Chinese authorities have long viewed organised religion as a threat to party loyalty, keeping a tight rein on all religious groups, but Muslim minorities in Xinjiang region have borne the brunt of far more aggressive crackdowns.

While restrictions on Ramadan fasting in schools and government offices have existed for decades, mass surveillance and detentions have intensified over the past three years in an effort to stop families from adhering to Muslim traditions even within their own homes, Alip Erkin, a Uyghur media activist for the Uyghur Bulletin, said.

Mr Erkin said people now feared they could be sent to internment camps "if they engaged in any religious activities or expressed their religious identities or traditional cultures".

The ABC approached China's National Religious Affairs Administration for comment, but it did not respond by the time of publication. Chinese authorities have previously said, however, they do not limit Ramadan practices.

In 2016 China's State Council published a document titled Freedom of Religious Belief in Xinjiang, which said "citizens' religious feelings and needs are fully respected".

Forced group lunches and lectures on socialist values
9773376-3x2-xlarge.jpg

IMAGEMr Erkin said the threat of arrests had created a climate of fear in which people "self censor" religious activity.(AP: Ng Han Guan, File)
Mr Erkin, who now lives in Australia, said throughout his schooling, fasting and praying during Ramadan were discouraged.

"In 2014 the ban [crackdown] intensified," he said.

China's frontier of fear

Satellite imagery lifts the lid on the size and spread of China's internment camps, used to indoctrinate vast numbers of the Xinjiang region's Muslim population.

Read more

Those government websites do not appear to have more recent posts forbidding fasting and prayers, but activists say an unofficial ban for students and government officials remains in place throughout China.

The crackdown on religious freedom at home has also intensified over the past few years.

While there were strict limitations within government institutes throughout China during 2014 and 2015, Mr Erkin said families were still afforded religious freedom at home.

surveillance intensified.

The United Nations estimates up to 1 million Uyghurs and other Muslim groups have been detained in re-education camps in the Xinjiangprovince since 2017.

Cameras and audio recorders now line every street and monitor the doorways of many households.

11086740-3x2-xlarge.jpg

IMAGESurveillance cameras line the streets of Urumqi in Xinjiang region.(ABC News: Tracey Shelton)
Government officials monitor families through 'home stays'
Government officials have also began making regular "home stays" in Xinjiang during which "families are required to provide officials with information about their lives and political views, and are subjected to political indoctrination", according to a Human Rights Watch report from May last year.

Aileen, 37, a Hui Muslim from the north-western Gansu province, said officials regularly searched homes and stayed with families in Xinjiang for about a week "to ensure there is no religious practice within the household".

If items such as prayer mats or religious books were found, someone was usually detained, said Aileen who asked to only be known by her first name to protect family members still living in China.

Muslim greetings such as salam mulakum, which means peace be upon you.

The main target of surveillance and detentions has been ethnic Uyghurs, one of several Muslim minorities living in China who have struggled for independence from China in the past.

While there is surveillance and some restrictions on religious practices in other regions of China, Aileen, who is now an Australian resident, said her family in Gansu were still allowed to fast and pray.

But in Xinjiang province, all Muslims have been subjected to detentions and bans on religious practices.

'Fast from China' campaign retaliation to ban
11083556-3x2-xlarge.jpg

IMAGEIn Xinjiang province, Muslims have been subjected to detentions and bans on religious practices.(ABC News: Tracey Shelton)
Within Xinjiang, Mr Erkin said the threat of arrests had created a climate of fear in which people "self censor" religious activity and were too afraid to even fast in their own homes.


Activists across the globe have called for a #FastFromChina in retaliation to the ban, calling on Muslims and human rights supporters to refrain from buying Chinese products in order to support China's repressed Muslim minorities.



"We are calling upon people who care for freedom of religion to not buy any Chinese products during the month of Ramadan.

"Ramadan is about consuming less and sharing more. So let's fast from China in solidarity with those who cannot fast in China."

Tweets and Facebook posts containing the hashtag #FastFromChina have been posted from many countries including the US, Australia, the UK and nations across the Middle East.



"This will be a big step forward in challenging China's genocide of Uyghurs and other Turkic people."
 
There's suddenly a lot of anti-China articles coming out and this one looks like one that should be read with a big pinch salt.

China has had a Muslim population living peacefully for decades. Why all of a sudden is China's Muslim population "oppressed"?

WTF is wrong with these people????? Communist China strikes again :crazy:
Says the guy who is vehemently anti-China. :crazy:
 
thred should be closed.i dont know why mods are turning blind eye to this sudden rise of fake news peddling on PDF against China and Pakistan by indian, bengali and other trolls here
 
WTF is wrong with these people????? Communist China strikes again :crazy:
@Get Ya Wig Split ;)
360截图20171016182546088.jpg


China cracks down on Ramadan fasting, prompting activist boycott of Chinese products

By Tracey Shelton and Iris Zhao
Posted 17 hours ago, updated15 hours ago

https://www.google.com/amp/amp.abc.net.au/article/11082244
11087356-3x2-xlarge.jpg

IMAGEMuslims traditionally fast from dawn to dusk and pray five times a day during Ramadan.(Reuters: Damir Sagolj)
With Muslims around the world observing the holy month of Ramadan, Chinese authorities have again launched a crackdown on fasting and religious practices by Islamic minorities.

Key points:

  • Fasting and other displays of religious affiliation are viewed as "signs of extremism"
  • Chinese authorities have long viewed organised religion as a threat to party loyalty
  • Mass surveillance and detentions have intensified over the past three years in Xinjiang
The restrictions are particularly enforced in the Muslim-majority Western province of Xinjiang, where Chinese authorities frequently stay at the homes of Muslim families to suppress religious activities, according to the Human Rights Watch and activists.

During Ramadan, Muslims traditionally fast from dawn to dusk and refrain from smoking and other vices.

Amnesty International said in a report released late last week Chinese authorities view Ramadan fasting — along with other displays of religious affiliation including beards, headscarves, regular prayers and avoidance of alcohol — as a "sign of extremism".

China's war on religion

Banned bibles, burnt crosses, and re-education camps — denomination aside, religion is a dangerous pursuit in Xi Jinping's China in 2018.

Read more

Chinese authorities have long viewed organised religion as a threat to party loyalty, keeping a tight rein on all religious groups, but Muslim minorities in Xinjiang region have borne the brunt of far more aggressive crackdowns.

While restrictions on Ramadan fasting in schools and government offices have existed for decades, mass surveillance and detentions have intensified over the past three years in an effort to stop families from adhering to Muslim traditions even within their own homes, Alip Erkin, a Uyghur media activist for the Uyghur Bulletin, said.

Mr Erkin said people now feared they could be sent to internment camps "if they engaged in any religious activities or expressed their religious identities or traditional cultures".

The ABC approached China's National Religious Affairs Administration for comment, but it did not respond by the time of publication. Chinese authorities have previously said, however, they do not limit Ramadan practices.

In 2016 China's State Council published a document titled Freedom of Religious Belief in Xinjiang, which said "citizens' religious feelings and needs are fully respected".

Forced group lunches and lectures on socialist values
9773376-3x2-xlarge.jpg

IMAGEMr Erkin said the threat of arrests had created a climate of fear in which people "self censor" religious activity.(AP: Ng Han Guan, File)
Mr Erkin, who now lives in Australia, said throughout his schooling, fasting and praying during Ramadan were discouraged.

"In 2014 the ban [crackdown] intensified," he said.

China's frontier of fear

Satellite imagery lifts the lid on the size and spread of China's internment camps, used to indoctrinate vast numbers of the Xinjiang region's Muslim population.

Read more

Those government websites do not appear to have more recent posts forbidding fasting and prayers, but activists say an unofficial ban for students and government officials remains in place throughout China.

The crackdown on religious freedom at home has also intensified over the past few years.

While there were strict limitations within government institutes throughout China during 2014 and 2015, Mr Erkin said families were still afforded religious freedom at home.

surveillance intensified.

The United Nations estimates up to 1 million Uyghurs and other Muslim groups have been detained in re-education camps in the Xinjiangprovince since 2017.

Cameras and audio recorders now line every street and monitor the doorways of many households.

11086740-3x2-xlarge.jpg

IMAGESurveillance cameras line the streets of Urumqi in Xinjiang region.(ABC News: Tracey Shelton)
Government officials monitor families through 'home stays'
Government officials have also began making regular "home stays" in Xinjiang during which "families are required to provide officials with information about their lives and political views, and are subjected to political indoctrination", according to a Human Rights Watch report from May last year.

Aileen, 37, a Hui Muslim from the north-western Gansu province, said officials regularly searched homes and stayed with families in Xinjiang for about a week "to ensure there is no religious practice within the household".

If items such as prayer mats or religious books were found, someone was usually detained, said Aileen who asked to only be known by her first name to protect family members still living in China.

Muslim greetings such as salam mulakum, which means peace be upon you.

The main target of surveillance and detentions has been ethnic Uyghurs, one of several Muslim minorities living in China who have struggled for independence from China in the past.

While there is surveillance and some restrictions on religious practices in other regions of China, Aileen, who is now an Australian resident, said her family in Gansu were still allowed to fast and pray.

But in Xinjiang province, all Muslims have been subjected to detentions and bans on religious practices.

'Fast from China' campaign retaliation to ban
11083556-3x2-xlarge.jpg

IMAGEIn Xinjiang province, Muslims have been subjected to detentions and bans on religious practices.(ABC News: Tracey Shelton)
Within Xinjiang, Mr Erkin said the threat of arrests had created a climate of fear in which people "self censor" religious activity and were too afraid to even fast in their own homes.


Activists across the globe have called for a #FastFromChina in retaliation to the ban, calling on Muslims and human rights supporters to refrain from buying Chinese products in order to support China's repressed Muslim minorities.



"We are calling upon people who care for freedom of religion to not buy any Chinese products during the month of Ramadan.

"Ramadan is about consuming less and sharing more. So let's fast from China in solidarity with those who cannot fast in China."

Tweets and Facebook posts containing the hashtag #FastFromChina have been posted from many countries including the US, Australia, the UK and nations across the Middle East.



"This will be a big step forward in challenging China's genocide of Uyghurs and other Turkic people."
@Black_cats Must admit, you have courage.

There's suddenly a lot of anti-China articles coming out and this one looks like one that should be read with a big pinch salt.

China has had a Muslim population living peacefully for decades. Why all of a sudden is China's Muslim population "oppressed"?


Says the guy who is vehemently anti-China. :crazy:
Oh look, more fake news from the vassals of the US regime. Another fine addition to their endless list of propaganda.

fake Nariyah testimony
fake Iraqi WMD
fake Gulf of Tonkin incident
fake Battle of Manila Bay
fake Tibetan genocide
fake Uyghur concentration camps
fake Sri Lanka debt trap
fake Bloomberg's Chinese spy chip
fake Huawei is "spyware"
fake Trump Russiagate
fake "Communist terrorism" across Europe - see Operation Gladio for that one.

The Western "free press" has zero credibility just like this pad CIA shill and his boyfriend, get ya wig split
You must be surprised. @Black_cats is from Bangladesh.
He believes Bangladesh is leading UNSC.
He believes that US, EU and Bangladesh are forming an alliance to deal with the Rosingya issue.
。。。。

In short, in his opinion, BD is a very important country in the world.
 
thred should be closed.i dont know why mods are turning blind eye to this sudden rise of fake news peddling on PDF against China and Pakistan by indian, bengali and other trolls here

ABC news is much more credible than you or any communist control news media!!

@Get Ya Wig Split ;)
View attachment 558909


@Black_cats Must admit, you have courage.



You must be surprised. @Black_cats is from Bangladesh.
He believes Bangladesh is leading UNSC.
He believes that US, EU and Bangladesh are forming an alliance to deal with the Rosingya issue.
。。。。

In short, in his opinion, BD is a very important country in the world.

Important to deal with Rohingya issue. Obviously all countries are working together, otherwise you won’t see number of resolution came to UN.

As China is blocking UN mandate solution, it won’t be surprised if Myanmar see rise of Arakan Army and other insurgent groups.
 
ABC news is much more credible than you or any communist control news media!!



Important to deal with Rohingya issue. Obviously all countries are working together, otherwise you won’t see number of resolution came to UN.

As China is blocking UN mandate solution, it won’t be surprised if Myanmar see rise of Arakan Army and other insurgent groups.
:enjoy:

Guess what. I can find many Bangladeshi news? ;)
360截图20190506145120301.jpg
 
People not reading the fine print and saying since there is no evidence in the streets of a ban it must be fakenews. Unfortunately people are completely misunderstanding the issue. The vast majority of the people are allowed to fast..there are some exceptions:

http://mediabites.com.pk/2019/05/china-bans-ramadan-fasting-in-muslim-region/

China bans Ramadan fasting in Muslim region

Screen Shot 2019-05-07 at 8.23.04 PM.jpg

Several government departments in China’s far western region of Xinjiang have banned Muslim staff from fasting during the month of Ramadan.

One department website said that civil servants cannot “take part in fasting and other religious activities”.

China has banned officials, students and teachers in the predominantly Muslim region of Xinjiang from fasting during Ramadan and instructing restaurants to stay open.

Most Muslims are required to fast from dawn to dusk during the sacred month, which began on Thursday. However, the Chinese Communist Party is officially an atheist and has been limiting the practice for years in Xinjiang, home to predominantly Muslim Uighur minorities.

“Workplaces for food will function at normal times during Ramadan,” said last week on the website of the Food and Drug Administration in Jinghe County, Xinjiang.

Officials in Bole County in the area said, “During Ramadan do not engage in fasting, vigils or other religious activities,” said the local administration’s report on the meeting this week.

Every year, attempts by the authorities to ban fast among Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang have been widely criticized by the ruling group.

Uighur human rights groups say that Chinese restrictions on Islam in Xinjiang have led to ethnic tensions in the region, where hundreds of people have been killed in clashes in recent years.

China says it faces a “terrorist threat” in Xinjiang and officials accuse “religious extremism” of increasing violence.

But our correspondent says that with Beijing blaming extremist Uighurs for growing violence, the ban is likely to be seen by many Muslims as an attack on their religion, further increasing tensions.

Among those imposing a ban are a commercial affairs department and a government hospital which got Muslim staff to sign a written pledge that they would not fast.

State-run newspapers have in addition been running editorials warning about the health dangers of fasting.

Many Uighurs say that the suppression of their cultural and religious freedoms is fuelling the unrest in the region

“China’s ban on fasting is intended to force Uygas to move away from its Muslim culture during Ramadan,” said Dilxat Rexit, a spokesman for the persecuted World Uighur assembly.

“Policies that prohibit religious fasting is a provocation and will only lead to instability and conflict.”

As in previous years, schoolchildren were involved in policies that restricted Ramadan and other religious ceremonies.

The Tarbaghatay Educational Bureau, known in China as Tacheng, ordered schools this month to tell students that “during Ramadan, ethnic minority students do not fast and do not enter mosques … and do not attend religious activities.”

Similar contracts were also published on the websites of other educational institutions and schools in Xinjiang.

Officials in Qiemo province met with local religious leaders this week to inform them that during Ramadan, the “maintaining social stability” inspections should be improved, the official website of the county governments.

Ahead of the holy month, a village in Yijia, near the border with Kazakhstan, said that mosques need to check the identity cards of all who come to pray during Ramadan, according to the government’s website.

Bole City Council said Mehmet Talip, a 90-year-old member of the Uighur Communist Party, promised to avoid fasting and vowed to “not enter a mosque in order to consciously resist religious and superstitious ideas”.

What does this harsh official rhetoric mean for China’s estimated 23 million Muslims — 10 million of whom live in Xinjiang? China’s Muslims make up less than 2 percent of the Chinese population — the Han majority, in contrast, make up about 92 percent of the population, according to China’s 2010 Census.
 
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People not reading the fine print and saying there is no evidence in the streets of a ban

http://mediabites.com.pk/2019/05/china-bans-ramadan-fasting-in-muslim-region/

China bans Ramadan fasting in Muslim region

50dab2e285b64add998f43ba137db212_18-696x392.jpg


Several government departments in China’s far western region of Xinjiang have banned Muslim staff from fasting during the month of Ramadan.


One department website said that civil servants cannot “take part in fasting and other religious activities”.

China has banned officials, students and teachers in the predominantly Muslim region of Xinjiang from fasting during Ramadan and instructing restaurants to stay open.

Most Muslims are required to fast from dawn to dusk during the sacred month, which began on Thursday. However, the Chinese Communist Party is officially an atheist and has been limiting the practice for years in Xinjiang, home to predominantly Muslim Uighur minorities.

“Workplaces for food will function at normal times during Ramadan,” said last week on the website of the Food and Drug Administration in Jinghe County, Xinjiang.

Officials in Bole County in the area said, “During Ramadan do not engage in fasting, vigils or other religious activities,” said the local administration’s report on the meeting this week.

Every year, attempts by the authorities to ban fast among Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang have been widely criticized by the ruling group.

Uighur human rights groups say that Chinese restrictions on Islam in Xinjiang have led to ethnic tensions in the region, where hundreds of people have been killed in clashes in recent years.

China says it faces a “terrorist threat” in Xinjiang and officials accuse “religious extremism” of increasing violence.

But our correspondent says that with Beijing blaming extremist Uighurs for growing violence, the ban is likely to be seen by many Muslims as an attack on their religion, further increasing tensions.

Among those imposing a ban are a commercial affairs department and a government hospital which got Muslim staff to sign a written pledge that they would not fast.

State-run newspapers have in addition been running editorials warning about the health dangers of fasting.

Many Uighurs say that the suppression of their cultural and religious freedoms is fuelling the unrest in the region

“China’s ban on fasting is intended to force Uygas to move away from its Muslim culture during Ramadan,” said Dilxat Rexit, a spokesman for the persecuted World Uighur assembly.

“Policies that prohibit religious fasting is a provocation and will only lead to instability and conflict.”

As in previous years, schoolchildren were involved in policies that restricted Ramadan and other religious ceremonies.

The Tarbaghatay Educational Bureau, known in China as Tacheng, ordered schools this month to tell students that “during Ramadan, ethnic minority students do not fast and do not enter mosques … and do not attend religious activities.”

Similar contracts were also published on the websites of other educational institutions and schools in Xinjiang.

Officials in Qiemo province met with local religious leaders this week to inform them that during Ramadan, the “maintaining social stability” inspections should be improved, the official website of the county governments.

Ahead of the holy month, a village in Yijia, near the border with Kazakhstan, said that mosques need to check the identity cards of all who come to pray during Ramadan, according to the government’s website.

Bole City Council said Mehmet Talip, a 90-year-old member of the Uighur Communist Party, promised to avoid fasting and vowed to “not enter a mosque in order to consciously resist religious and superstitious ideas”.

What does this harsh official rhetoric mean for China’s estimated 23 million Muslims — 10 million of whom live in Xinjiang? China’s Muslims make up less than 2 percent of the Chinese population — the Han majority, in contrast, make up about 92 percent of the population, according to China’s 2010 Census.
Americans Kill Muslims Like Roaches

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford
The current American imperial offensive “has all the characteristics of a race war,” and is viewed as such by much of the world. “In Muslim nations, the U.S. treats the inhabitants like roaches, stomping human beings underfoot and cursing them when they scurry to get out of the way.”

Americans Kill Muslims Like Roaches
A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford

“Highways of death inevitably appear whenever U.S. troops are deployed among populations that Americans think of as less than human.”
The latest American atrocity in Afghanistan – the wanton slaughter of civilians on an inter-city bus near Kandahar – is yet more bloody proof that the United States military offensive in the Muslim world has all the characteristics of a race war. The men, women and children in the packed, full-size bus found themselves suddenly boxed in between two American convoys on a highway of death – a place where the natives are instantly liquidated if they are unfortunate enough to find themselves in proximity to U.S. soldiers. Such highways of death inevitably appear whenever U.S. troops are deployed among populations that Americans think of as less than human.
In Iraq, the road between central Baghdad and the airport was also known among the natives as the “highway of death.” American convoys routinely fired on commuters on their way to work if they felt the Iraqi vehicles got too close. Civilian employees of the United States share in the imperial privilege of killing Muslims at will. In 2005, British mercenaries took a leisurely drive along Baghdad’s “highway of death” playing Elvis Presley records while shooting Iraqi motorists for sport. So confident of impunity were the soldiers of fortune, they videotaped their ghoulish joyride, to entertain friends and relatives back home. And they were right; neither the mercenary killers nor their corporate employers were punished.
In 2007, Blackwater mercenaries opened fire on commuters trapped in a traffic jam in Baghdad’s Nisour Square, killing 17 and wounding at least 20 – apparently because they were bored. But, why not? U.S. troops had been committing mass murder in villages like Haditha for years. Early in the war, they leveled Fallujah, a city larger than Birmingham, Alabama, after first bombing the hospital. Casual killing is a prerogative of imperial occupiers when the natives are considered sub-human.
“They would never behave in such a manner in European.”
In the newly-released WikiLeaks video of a 2007 aerial human turkey-shoot over a suburban Baghdad neighborhood, the voices of the American helicopter pilots and gunners are testimony to the endemic, pathological racism of the U.S. occupying force. The Americans beg their commanders for permission to kill Iraqis milling about on the street below, presenting no threat to anyone. They are thrilled when their cannon fire rips into over a dozen men, including two journalists. "Oh yeah, look at those dead bastards," says one G.I. When they fire on a car that stopped to aid one of the victims, severely wounding two children, the Americans crack that it served the Iraqis right for bringing children into a battle. But there was no battle, just Americans bringing casual death into an Iraqi neighborhood.
Americans seem unable to resist raining death from the skies on wedding parties in Afghanistan. Apparently, any gathering of Afghans, anywhere, for any reason, is sufficient cause for Americans to unleash high-tech weapons of destruction. They would never behave in such a manner in European countries because, well, people live there. But in Muslim nations, the U.S. treats the inhabitants like roaches, stomping human beings underfoot and cursing them when they scurry to get out of the way. This is race war, pure and simple. The fact that it's commander-in-chief is a Black man does not alter the character of the crime, on iota. For Black Agenda Radio, I'm Glen Ford. On the web, go to www.BlackAgendaReport.com.
BAR executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com.

https://blackagendareport.com/content/americans-kill-muslims-roaches-0
 
Mods need to ban the op, get ya wig split, Hamartia Antidote, f-22. These vile white supremacists are ruining the forum with their propaganda. I wouldn't be surprised if they work for the FIVE EYES military psychological warfare units such as Operation Earnest Voice.

I'm quoting a Pakistani news site just so nationalists like you don't conveniently blame it on "Western Media". If you hate Muslims, Pakistanis, and their associated news sites you should leave.
 
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People not reading the fine print and saying since there is no evidence in the streets of a ban it must be fakenews. Unfortunately people are completely misunderstanding the issue.

http://mediabites.com.pk/2019/05/china-bans-ramadan-fasting-in-muslim-region/
Not a single mainstream Pakistani media is reporting it and not a single NGO or anyone else *IN PAKISTAN* is reporting it. You found an obscure site operated by some guy who is desperate for page views.

@Dubious
 
Not a single mainstream Pakistani media is reporting it and not a single NGO or anyone else *IN PAKISTAN* is reporting it. You found an obscure site operated by some guy who is desperate for page views.

@Dubious

The funny thing is I posted the story to discredit all the stories of widespread bans and you guys still managed to get all upset.
 
Not a single mainstream Pakistani media is reporting it and not a single NGO or anyone else *IN PAKISTAN* is reporting it. You found an obscure site operated by some guy who is desperate for page views.

@Dubious
Ask a Indian with American flag why didn't he posted US president pardon a murderer of a unarmed Muslim prisoner in Irag.

The funny thing is I posted the story to discredit all the stories of widespread bans and you guys still managed to get all upset.
Wrong website for you to post article about mistreatment of Muslim in China while US still bombing the Muslim right now.
 
Ask a Indian with American flag

LOL! @Mista here they go again with the name calling. Standard operating procedure phase one right out of the manual. It's amazing.

BTW
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/team-usa.306182/page-134#post-10454877

I can see this thread is going to be sent into phase two of the Standard Operating Procedure. Gather the troops and have a whole bunch of people spam this thread with off-topic hate posts to get the mods to close it.

I'm out.
 
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LOL! @Mista here they go again with the name calling. Standard operating procedure right out of the manual. It's amazing.
US in a geoplitical competition with China, US as a whole will find anything to slander China image, know why all the Muslim didn't seriously take US criticized of China treatment of Muslim because Muslim themselves being murder by US left and right.
 
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