The government's attempt to clamp down on religious expression has backfired among Uyghurs. 
By Umar Farooq 
Al-Jazeera - 05 Jul 2014
 
Kashgar, China - Chinese 
authorities have imposed restrictions on Uyghur Muslims during the month
 of Ramadan, banning government employees and school children from 
fasting, in what rights groups say has become an annual attempt at systematically erasing the region's Islamic identity. 
Chinese authorities have justified the ban on fasting
 by saying it is meant to protect the health of students, and 
restrictions on religious practices by government officials are meant to
 ensure the state does not support any particular faith.
Yet in Kashgar, in Xinjiang province, China's westernmost city,
 close to the border with Tajikstan and Kyrgyztan, Uyghur Muslims say 
the restrictions have backfired. Not only have locals become more 
observant of Islamic practices, but many have found ways to flaunt 
Chinese laws restricting everything from who may attend the mosque, to 
which copies of the Quran are read.
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