The Chinese government has banned parents from giving their children
traditional Islamic names, such as ‘Mohammed’ and ‘Medina’, as part of a
recent crackdown against ‘muslim extremists’ in the western Xinjiang
province.
Officials in the province, home to over 20 million Chinese Muslims,
released the new guidelines in an official document called “List of
Banned Ethnic Minority Names.” Parents can no longer name their babies
‘Arafat’, ‘Mujahid’, ‘Medina’, ‘Mohammed’, and other traditional names
in the Islamic faith.
“I think it is possible, according to China’s anti-terror law, [that]
there are several names forbidden to give to new-born babies, such as
Jihad, which means holy war,” said a provincial government official. “It
is absolutely forbidden to get registered with this name.”
Chinese officials have threatened those that refuse to comply with
the ban, saying they will be denied education, healthcare, and other
services provided by the communist state.
The new ban is a reaction from Beijing over a recent spat of terror attacks that have rocked Xinjiang.
Last September Islamic terrorists attacked a local coal mine, killing
over 50 people and injuring dozens more. In response, the Chinese
government banned certain religious ceremonies and prohibited men from
wearing ‘Islamic-style’ beards.
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