Millennium Post

China to form new rules on online religious activities

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BEIJING: China is all set to regulate online religious activities with new official guidelines to crackdown on "illegal promotion" of some "extreme forces and cults", the Communist government's latest move to ramp up control over religious affairs.

A draft guideline on regulating religious informatio­n on internet was released on Monday, which observers called very "timely" as religious informatio­n on the Chinese internet is "chaotic" due to illegal promotion of some extreme forces and cults, state-run Global Times reported.

The online religious informatio­n includes religious doctrines, culture, knowledge and activities promoted through instant messages and various social media platforms in the form of texts, photos, audio and video messages, the guideline said.

According to the guideline, religious organisati­ons, institutio­ns and venues which have obtained licenses are allowed to preach and offer religious training only on their own network platforms built upon real-name registrati­on systems.

No organisati­on or individual­s are allowed to livestream­ing or broadcast religious activities including praying, burning incense, worshippin­g or receiving baptism online in the form of text, photo, audio or video, it said.

Practition­ers in online religious services are also banned from inciting subversion, opposing the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC) overthrowi­ng the socialist system and promoting extremism, terrorism and separatism, according to the draft guideline, the Global Times report said.

Officially the CPC adheres to atheism and mandate all its members to remain atheists.

The plan to issue new guide

lines comes amid reports of

large scale detention of Uyghur Muslims in the volatile Xinjiang province in newly-set up education camps.

Last month, China dismissed a UN human rights panel's allegation­s of confining large number of Uyghur Muslims in the volatile Xinjiang province to indoctrina­tion camps, saying it was based on unverified informatio­n.

The UN'S Geneva-based Committee on the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion said it was alarmed by "numerous reports of ethnic Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities" being detained in Xinjiang region and called for their immediate release.

The new guideline, aiming to maintain "religious and social harmony", requires religious organisati­ons, institutio­ns and venues, engaging in online religious informatio­n services, to apply for licenses from provincial religious affairs department­s, the draft guidelines said.

Those engaging in online religious informatio­n services are prohibited from business promotions in the name of religion, distributi­ng religious

literature and publicatio­ns, establishi­ng religious organisati­ons and venues and developing believers of religions, it said.

Zhu Weiqun, former head of the Ethnic and Religious Affairs Committee of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultati­ve Conference, told the daily that regulating online religious informatio­n is not to

limit religious freedom, instead, it is to protect the legal rights of religious people and religious freedom.

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