China’s largest Muslim ally broke ranks to criticize its repression of the Muslim Uighur minority
Alexandra Ma
6m
Pakistan, China's closest ally in the Muslim world, openly criticized its treatment of its Uighur population, a majority-Muslim ethnic minority living in the western Chinese region in Xinjiang, earlier this week.
It marks the strongest condemnation of China's repression of the population yet.
Noorul Haq Qadri, Pakistan's federal minister for religious affairs, warned that Beijing's strict regulation of Uighur activity fuels extremism rather than counters terrorism, Pakistani media reported.
"The placement of restrictions increases the chances of an extremist viewpoint growing in reaction," Qadri told China's ambassador to Pakistan, Yao Xing, on Wednesday
according to Dawn newspaper.
His comments directly challenge China's justification of its
crackdown on Xinjiang— known to Uighurs as East Turkestan — which are that it counters terrorism and is
"training" people to avoid religious extremism.
Qadri on Wednesday also called for a softer approach from Beijing to curb intolerance and promote religious harmony in Xinjiang,
Pakistan's The Nation newspaper reported.
He also proposed for Pakistani religious scholars to visit Xinjiang.
Yao appeared to agree, reportedly saying: "Exchange of viewpoints between religious scholars of both countries is vital for better interfaith relations."
Yao also invited Qadri to visit China, Dawn reported, although it's not clear whether this would entail a trip to Xinjiang.
Li Xiaojun, a spokesman for China's state council information office, told reporters last week that sending Uighurs to detention centers was "not mistreatment," but "to establish professional training centers, educational centers."
Turkey spoke out against China's treatment of Uighurs in 2009 and 2015, which resulted in Beijing repeatedly warning Istanbul not to "twist facts" or "poison ties and derail cooperation" between the two countries.
Whether Islamabad will suffer the same fate is not clear. Pakistan is China's biggest economic ally in the Muslim world, with the two countries forming in 2013 the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor — a massive
$62 billion partnership consisting of transport and energy projects.
China has invested between $1 trillion and $8 trillion in its BRI deals around the world, according to the
Center for Strategic and International Studies. The BRI is one of Xi Jinping's pet projects.
https://www.businessinsider.com/pak...r-repression-of-muslim-uighur-xinjiang-2018-9