喀什市爱国宗教人士被害案告破-搜狐新闻
There is no English version news at the moment.
He was killed by three terrorists after Fajr prayer
There is no English version news at the moment.
He was killed by three terrorists after Fajr prayer
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《向近十年在新疆反恐战线上牺牲的英雄们致敬!》—在线播放—优酷网,视频高清在线观看
Matyrs died for fight the terrorism
Last year,another Imam killed by the terrorists
吐鲁番主管民族宗教事务的联合工作部门干部阿里木. 阿不力米提 (Alim Ablimit) 当时对自由亚洲电台表示,74岁的阿布都热依木. 大毛拉是一名支持中共党政的高级宗教人员,他被袭击是因为坚持打击三种势力。
阿不力米提说,2013年6月26日,吐鲁番鄯善县鲁克沁镇的暴力袭击导致36人死亡事件发生后,当地进行打击三种势力的大规模政治教育和宣传运动。
大毛拉率先执行,还公开在清真寺内谴责袭击者为“恐怖分子”,部分的人士特别是年青的维吾尔人经常对其支持政府的言论感到“失望和愤怒”。
当地政府的另一位维吾尔族官员阿里木. 萨塔尔 (Alim Sattar) 介绍,事件发生在周三晚上10点半,大毛拉从清真寺返到家中门前遭到袭击。当晚大毛拉在清真寺当值任教长,其中一名疑犯在清真寺外监视,另外两人在其门外等候,进行袭击。
萨塔尔说,在大毛拉遇袭前一个月,已被提醒停止发表有关支持政府要求维吾尔人剪胡子和不要佩戴伊斯兰宗教头巾面纱的言论。但大毛拉仍然坚持其立场,为了其人身安全,他们取消了原订举行的提倡族人融入现代生活方式的会议。
当地亦有居民声称,大毛拉被袭是因为他向警方举报吐鲁番626暴力袭击事件疑犯的行踪,导致他们被警察抓捕。
现年74岁的阿布都热依木. 大毛拉,有3名儿子和5名女儿,是吐鲁番伊斯兰协会副主席,生前致力缓和民族冲突,促进地区经济发展。
2013年8月14日,新疆吐鲁番伊斯兰协会副主席阿布都热依木- 大毛拉 (Abdurehim Damolla) 疑因向警方举报当地626暴力袭击事件疑犯的行踪,以及支持政府的政策,当天晚在其家门前遭人砍死 。怀疑相关部门内线泄漏了举报信息导致当晚被砍死。
SHANGHAI—The state-approved leader of China's largest mosque by size was killed in the far western Chinese city of Kashgar, according to multiple accounts, in the latest violence in a region beset by ethnic and religious strife.
Jume Tahir was killed Wednesday shortly after attending morning prayers, according to the state-run Xinhua News Agency and ts.cn, an official news source run by the government in Xinjiang. Mr. Tahir was the leader of Kashgar's ancient and symbolic Id Kah Mosque.
The reports said three Uighur men attacked the imam, and they were "affected by religious extremist thinking" and wanted to enhance their own influence through a "major event." Police shot dead two of the attackers and arrested the third a few hours later, the reports said. They didn't mention the men's ethnicity but identified them by what appeared to be ethnic Uighur names.
A U.S.-based spokesman for an exile dissident group that represents Uighurs, a predominantly Muslim ethnic minority in China with a large population in Xinjiang, also said Mr. Tahir was killed but didn't have further details.
While the reasons behind the killing weren't clear, it comes against a backdrop of ethnic strife in Xinjiang, where some Uighurs agitate for independence from a state where most of the population is Han Chinese.
China's government blames Islamic separatists for years of violence in Xinjiang—often targeting symbols of state power. State-approved imams there have faced violence in the past.
Mr. Tahir held a senior position in the government-run China Islamic Association and had sat as a deputy in the National People's Congress. Appointed to his position by the government, he regularly endorsed its policies in Xinjiang.
Omer Kanat, a spokesman for the Washington-based World Uyghur Congress, said the imam had a reputation as a "tool for the government."
"When something happens, the government lets him speak and criticize activities of Uighurs," Mr. Kanat said.
Word of Mr. Tahir's death moved quickly through the city. A hotelier who works near the mosque said the death of a "such good person" was troubling.
His death follows a deadly clash this week between police and civilians, in the nearby city of Yarkand, that coincided with the end of the Muslim fasting month Ramadan. Also on Wednesday, state prosecutors in the Xinjiang capital city of Urumqi announced formal charges of fomenting separatist activities against well-known dissident Uighur economist Ilham Tohti.
China has been beset in recent months by a wave of deadly stabbings and bombings across the nation that, in cases, left civilians dead. The government, which has blamed the attacks on Xinjiang separatists, in May began a yearlong antiterrorism campaign centered in the western region.
Chinese President Xi Jinping toured Xinjiang in April to emphasize a "strike first" policy. Hours after he departed, blasts ripped through a central train station there. A market attack followed days later, and police have since announced scores of arrests of alleged terrorists.
Muslims inside and outside China are critical of the government's tight control of religious affairs, which includes approving spiritual leaders like Mr. Tahir. Dissidents say limits on religious activity sow distrust of Chinese authority.
As head of the 600-year-old Id Kah Mosque, the imam was a key figure in China's state-backed Islamic system and had credited the government for permitting religious freedom. When quoted in Chinese media, Mr. Tahir has pinned blame for past violence in Xinjiang "on handful of religious extremists and terrorists," using terminology similar to government officials
http://online.wsj.com/articles/state-appointed-muslim-leader-killed-in-china-1406798803
We should look into regulating all mosques and seminaries ourselves lest we get saddled with idiots sending out more of our boys to Iraq and sundry nations
It seems there is english version news of this incident from RFA, although they usually provide biased material.
there is no special laws, as far as I know.May he rest in Peace.
What are the laws in India regarding radicalism ?