SINO DAILY
Popular Chinese Muslim website shuttered after Xi Jinping petition
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 14, 2016


One of China's most popular online communities for Muslims has been shuttered after posting a petition asking Chinese President Xi Jinping to stop his "brutal suppression" of activists, the letter's authors told AFP Wednesday.

Since 2003, the "Zhongmu Wang" website, or 2muslim.com, functioned as an "online network of Muslims sharing Islam", according to archived descriptions.

But as of Wednesday the site was inaccessible, showing only a message stating it was "under maintenance".

Two of its affiliated social media accounts were also unavailable, displaying messages that declared one account "abnormal" and the other "in violation of required guidelines".

China officially has more than 23 million Muslims, though some independent estimates say there may be as many as 50 million -- which would put China among the world's top 10 Muslim nations.

While China's constitution enshrines freedom of religious belief, authorities keep strict limits on it, recognising only five belief systems and seeking to control their messages.

The closure came after the posting of an open letter to Xi calling for a halt to the "brutal suppression" of activists and the immediate release of those still detained by the state, according to students who wrote the petition.

The letter criticised Xi for overseeing a crackdown on dissent since coming to power in 2012, with hundreds of lawyers, activists and academics detained and dozens jailed.

"You are not responsible for all of the crimes of the totalitarian system, but as the totalitarian system's head and its commander-in-chief of repression, you must take responsibility for the blood and tears which now flow," it said.

"In the next spring of China's new Jasmine Revolution, who will drive your tanks to crush us, the new generation of students after 1989?"

Yi Sulaiman Gu, a Muslim student studying in the US at the University of Georgia, told AFP the website shut the day after he posted the letter to a forum that had previously hosted sensitive discussions on issues such as China's persecution of Muslim dissidents.

"We believed it would be safe for Zhongmu to post it there," Gu said.

Phone calls to the website's owner went unanswered.

But the letter gained attention when screenshots of it were reposted to China's Twitter-like Weibo by opinion leader Xi Wuyi, a professor of Marxism at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, who said it proved the site supported Xinjiang separatists.

Violence in Xinjiang, the homeland of China's 10-million strong Uighur ethnic minority, has killed hundreds, with Beijing attributing it to Islamic extremism and foreign influence.

"The Chinese government is very unfriendly to the Muslims inside China, especially the Muslims in Xinjiang," Anthony Chang, a co-author of the letter completing his bachelor's degree at the University of Queensland in Australia, told AFP.

rld/bfc/tm

Weibo


Comment on this article using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

.


Related Links
China News from SinoDaily.com






Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

Previous Report
SINO DAILY
Hong Kong finance chief resigns, tipped for leadership race
Hong Kong (AFP) Dec 12, 2016
Hong Kong's finance chief resigned Monday ahead of what is widely expected to be a tilt at the city leadership. John Tsang - nicknamed "Mr Pringles" by local media for his resemblance to the crisp brand's mascot - is seen as a more moderate alternative to current leader Leung Chun-ying, who said Friday he would step down in July. The city has become sharply divided under Leung, whose ... read more


SINO DAILY
U.S. Air Force approves Lockheed Martin's SBIRS ground system

Raytheon to provide Patriot missile capability for undisclosed country

Saudis intercept missile fired from Yemen

US general says missile system in S. Korea in 8-10 months

SINO DAILY
South Korea receives 60 KEPD 350K missiles for deployment

Raytheon gets $60 million contract modification for RAM missiles

U.S. Army contracts BAE Systems for rocket propellant grains

2 million Israelis exposed to rocket fire, says report

SINO DAILY
MBDA's Brimstone missile planned for Britain's Protector drone

Britain signs off on General Atomics' Protector program

NTU and Stratasys 3iD print operational ULTEM drone with embedded electronics

'Dronejacking' may be the next big cyber threat

SINO DAILY
Japan to Launch First Military Communications Satellite on January 24

Intelsat General to provide satellite services to RiteNet for US Army network

NSA gives Type1 certification to Harris radio

Upgraded telecommunications network for Marines

SINO DAILY
U.S. Army to begin Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle testing

Veyance contracted for Abrams tank tracking

U.S. State Dept. approves sale of Stryker vehicles to Peru

Saab receives Carl-Gustaf M4 weapon system contract

SINO DAILY
US cancels weapons transfers to Saudi over Yemen campaign

Saudi arms industry may take years, chief says

Europe, Russia arms groups gain market share in 2015: study

China complains to Singapore over armoured vehicles

SINO DAILY
Putin calls for peace treaty with Japan ahead of visit

Beijing warns Trump over One China policy

Rex Tillerson, oilman with Putin ties, to lead State Dept

China offers Philippines weapons for drug war

SINO DAILY
New aspect of atom mimicry for nanotechnology applications

ANU demonstrates 'ghost imaging' with atoms

Supersonic spray yields new nanomaterial for bendable, wearable electronics

Researchers use acoustic waves to move fluids at the nanoscale