.

NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Communist Party Orders Crackdown on Religion in Its Ranks





(RFA)  -  The atheist ruling Chinese Communist Party has tightened restrictions on the practice of religion by its nearly 90 million members, as well as insisting that they show positive signs of loyalty to President Xi Jinping.

Newly revised "Regulations on Disciplinary Measures" issued on Aug. 26 require the party to "strictly deal with the use of religious activities to undermine national unity."

Party committees at every level, whether in government departments or major enterprises, must also "strengthen the ideological education of religious members."

"If this education hasn't helped, the member should be persuaded to quit the party," the rules say.



As well as forgoing religious practices, members are expected to demonstrate that they consciously support Xi Jinping as a "core leader," rather than simply nodding along with official propaganda, political analysts said.

"Anyone who vilifies the party or the national image, vilifies and defiles party and state leaders and heroes, or distorts the history of the party, the People's Republic of China, or the People's Liberation Army (PLA) must be punished," the directive says.

U.S.-based political analyst Gao Xin said the ruling party's regulations are the equivalent of criminal legislation.

"That means that if you don't consciously uphold the core position of Xi Jinping, you will have committed a disciplinary violation," Gao told RFA. 

"Punishments range up to expulsion ... which is the equivalent of the death penalty in criminal law."

"So the fact that they have written this into the disciplinary regulations is a very different thing from just symbolic propaganda slogans [about the core leader]," he said.

"Xi Jinping requires the whole party and the whole country to bow down before him," Gao said.

He said the rules also mean that anyone questioning the official version of history will face sanctions.

"[The rules aren't saying] that you can't distort historical truth; they are saying that you're not allowed to distort the version of history approved by [the Communist Party]," Gao said.


Read More . . . .


No comments: