Advertisement
Advertisement
Religion in China
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Chinese officials have increasingly urged local governments to better assimilate Muslim minorities into Han Chinese culture. Photo: Reuters

China jails Muslim man for 2 years over Islam WeChat groups

Hui man imprisoned for ‘disturbing normal religious activity’ by forming discussion group and teaching Koran online

A member of a Muslim minority group has been sentenced to two years in a Chinese prison after forming online discussions groups to teach Islam.

Huang Shike was arrested in Xinjiang last year, three months after he formed a discussion group about Muslim worship on the messaging app WeChat, according to the official website China Judgments Online. Huang, 49, taught about the Koran in another WeChat discussion group. More than 100 people were members of each group, the website said.

The discussion groups “disturbed normal religious activity” and violated laws about using the internet to discuss religion, the website said.

Chinese authorities have dramatically increased surveillance and police patrols in Xinjiang, fearing the spread of militant Islam which they believe has infiltrated the region from Central Asia.

Huang is a member of the Hui minority. There are more than 20 million Muslims in China, mainly among Uygur, Hui and other ethnic minorities. China’s 10.6 million Hui – descendants of Muslim settlers and Chinese who converted to Islam – have long endured strained relations with the Han, who constitute more than 90 per cent of the country’s 1.37 billion people.

Chinese officials have increasingly urged local governments to better assimilate Muslim minorities into Han Chinese culture, as many ethnic policy hardliners have decried a trend of what they call “Arabisation” among Chinese Muslims.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Muslim jailed 2 years for Islam WeChat
Post