Kuwait Times

China province defends ban on Tibetan lessons

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BEIJING: Chinese authoritie­s yesterday defended a ban on schoolchil­dren attending informal Tibetan language classes taught by Buddhist monks in western China, as religious and cultural freedoms in the country come under increasing pressure. A county in western Qinghai-a province with a large Tibetan population that is mostly Buddhist-in December ordered an immediate halt to informal language classes taught by monks during the winter school holidays.

The lessons taught in monasterie­s in the province bordering Tibet have gained popularity among parents as a way for their children to learn a language that is being sidelined from the official curriculum. It follows a similar ban last summer barring Tibetan students from taking part in religious activities during their holidays. The provincial government said yesterday that the lessons were “illegal” and said the monasterie­s were “safety hazards” as well as being “ill-equipped” to teach students.

“According to Chinese law... education is conducted by the government. No organizati­on or person can use religion as a means of obstructin­g the state education system,” it said in a statement. It added that the classes pose a financial burden to students and their families, and contravene regulation­s to reduce the workload of students. Monasterie­s and monks who do not follow the new rules will be “dealt with in accordance with the law”, the statement said. The regulation­s follow similar edicts by the ruling Communist Party in other regions with large ethnic minority population­s, starting with a clampdown on Islam in Xinjiang, a Muslim-majority region in the far west. — AFP

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