Umat Islam Uighur di Xinjiang, Republik Komunis China adalah kaum minoriti yang selalu dianiaya dengan pelbagai dasar dan tindakan yang melanggar norma dan prinsip hak asasi antarabangsa! |
Dan kaum cauvinis tuduh Malaysia extremis, fundamentalis, taliban dan macam-macam lagi!
Sebahagian daripada umat Islam berbangsa Uighur yang merupakan minoriti di Xinjiang, Republik Komunis China dilarang mengerjakan puasa!
Puasa bulan Ramadhan bukan sahaja wajib, malah ianya sebahagian daripada Rukun Islam!
Saya mendesak Kerajaan Malaysia menggunakan hubungan baik dengan Kerajaan Republik China, dan kedudukan berpengaruh didalam OIC, untuk mendesak supaya dihentikan tindakan yang bukan sahaja menghina agama Islam, tetapi melanggar norma dan prinsip hak asasi antarabangsa.
Dan kepada umat Melayu-Islam, lihatlah perkara seperti ini dengan mata keimanan, mata keinsafan bahawa begitulah yang akan terjadi kepada kita jika negara dijajah semula!
Lihatlah penderitaan umat Islam Gaza dan Tebing Barat di Palestin yang terpaksa bermandi darah menyabung nyawa di bulan Ramadhan ini angkara rejim zionis yang menguasai mereka!
Semoga Ramadhan kali ini menambahkan ketaqwaan kepada kita semua, dan memperkukuhkan ikatan ukhwah dan kesatuan sesama kita.
Satu Aqidah! Satu Tuhan! Satu Nabi! Satu Kitab! Satu Qiblat! Jadilah kita Satu Ummah!
Wallahua'lam dan Wassalam.
Adios amigos, grasias senor.
Zulkifli Bin Noordin
Khamis
05 Ramadhan 1435
03 Julai 2014
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From www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-28123267
2 July 2014 Last updated at 12:37
China bans Xinjiang officials from observing Ramadan fast
Several
government departments in China's
far western region of Xinjiang have banned Muslim staff from fasting during the
month of Ramadan
One department
website said that civil servants cannot "take part in fasting and other
religious activities".
The move comes amid
tightened security in the region which has been hit by a growing number of
violent attacks.
Authorities blame
separatist Muslim Uighurs, but Uighur leaders deny they are behind the attacks.
Activists have
accused Beijing
of exaggerating the threat from Uighur separatists to justify a crackdown on
the Uighurs' religious and cultural freedoms.
Increasing tensions
State-administered
Bozhou Radio and TV University said on its website that the fasting ban applied
to party members, teachers and young people.
China has been
accused of suppressing the cultural and religious freedoms of Uighurs
"We remind
everyone that they are not permitted to observe a Ramadan fast," it said.
Similarly a weather
bureau in western Xinjiang was reported by the AFP news agency to have said on
its website that the ban was "in accordance with instructions from higher
authorities".
The BBC's Martin
Patience in Beijing says that this is not the
first time that China
has restricted fasting in Xinjiang.
But our
correspondent says that with Beijing
blaming extremist Uighurs for growing violence, the ban is likely to be seen by
many Muslims as an attack on their religion, further increasing tensions.
Among those imposing
a ban are a commercial affairs department and a government hospital which got
Muslim staff to sign a written pledge that they would not fast.
State-run newspapers
have in addition been running editorials warning about the health dangers of
fasting.
Many Uighurs say
that the suppression of their cultural and religious freedoms is fuelling the
unrest in the region and attacks elsewhere in China.
Last month 13
assailants were killed in an attack on a police station in the restive province.
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