CDT (China Digital Times) issued an article on July 17 stating that the CCP has extended the “re-education camp” model to Muslim groups other than Uyghurs. Although China’s “re-education” has existed since the establishment of the CCP, its labor reform system Formally abolished in 2013, after Chen Quanguo was transferred from Tibet to Xinjiang, the “re-education” was resurrected in concentration camps and intensified. Not only was the local Uyghur Muslims severely suppressed, but also extended to Muslim groups such as the Hask and Hui, and the attack Covering the whole world and conducting internal and external joint control to threaten genocide, it is obvious that the CCP is not seeking to suppress and maintain stability like other religions, and it is also trying to eradicate Muslim beliefs.
Source: XINJIANG SURVEILLANCE EXPANDS TO NON-UYGHUR MUSLIMS
The testimony quoted by AFP is as follows:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
"The winds have shifted" in the past year, explained a senior imam who requested anonymity, adding: "Frankly, I’m very afraid they’re going to implement the Xinjiang model here."
[…] “They want to secularise Muslims, to cut off Islam at the roots,” the imam said, shaking with barely restrained emotion. “These days, children are not allowed to believe in religion: only in Communism and the party.”
[…] “We're scared, very scared. If it goes on like this, after a generation or two, our traditions will be gone,” said Ma Lan, a 45-year-old caretaker, tears dripping quietly into her uneaten bowl of beef noodle soup.
Inspectors checked her local mosque every few days during the last school holiday to ensure none of the 70 or so village boys were present. Their imam initially tried holding lessons in secret before sunrise but soon gave up, fearing repercussions.
Instead of studying five hours a day at the mosque, her 10-year-old son stayed home watching television. He dreams of being an imam, but his schoolteachers have encouraged him to make money and become a Communist cadre, she said.