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Beijing cracking down on ‘chaotic’ online promotion of religion

- Global Times

SHANGHAI — China has drawn up new draft guidelines to crack down on the “chaotic” and illegal online promotion of religion, the official reported on Tuesday, part of a tough state campaign to bring religious worship into line.

All organizati­ons engaged in the disseminat­ion of religious informatio­n online will be obliged to apply for licenses from provincial religious affairs department­s, the paper said, citing a policy document issued on Monday.

While the license will enable them to “preach and offer religious training,” they will not be allowed to live-stream or broadcast religious activities. The disseminat­ion of religious informatio­n anywhere other than their own Internet platforms is also prohibited. The guidelines also prohibit online religious services from inciting subversion, opposing the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party and promoting extremism and separatism.

Chinese citizens are theoretica­lly free to practise any religion as long as it is officially recognized by the government. It has repeatedly cracked down on unauthoriz­ed religious activity, with authoritie­s in Beijing shutting down a large Protestant church on Monday.

China has also been under heavy internatio­nal scrutiny for its treatment of its mostly Muslim Uighur minority in the northweste­rn region of Xinjiang.

Human rights groups have accused the Chinese government of conducting a punitive crackdown that has seen the detention of as many as 1 million ethnic Uighurs in internment camps. —

 ?? REUTERS ?? THE HEAD PASTOR of the Zion church in Beijing, Jin Mingri, poses in the lobby of the unofficial Protestant ‘house’ church in Beijing in this Aug. 28 photo.
REUTERS THE HEAD PASTOR of the Zion church in Beijing, Jin Mingri, poses in the lobby of the unofficial Protestant ‘house’ church in Beijing in this Aug. 28 photo.

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