BITTER WINTER

Brand New Draft Regulation: More Restriction on Religions in China

by | Sep 14, 2018 | News China

Incense burning in Shanghai. Posting a picture like this on the Internet will become illegal in China when the new draft becomes law.

Incense burning in Shanghai. Posting a picture like this on the Internet will become illegal in China when the new draft becomes law. Credits: ermell – CC BY-SA 4.0

A new regulation on religion confines mention of religion on any Internet platform to a few government-controlled organizations that will receive a special license for very limited Web activity. All the others and individuals will be punished even for posting a picture of somebody praying, receiving a baptism, or burning incense in a temple.

by Massimo Introvigne

The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has published this week a draft guideline on regulating online religious information, opening it for comments until October 9. It is presented as “one of the regulations” (not the only one) implementing the new religious law that came into force on February 1, 2018.

The draft regulation deals with “religious information including religious doctrines, culture, knowledge and activities promoted through instant messages and various social media platforms in the form of texts, photos, audio and video messages.”

Only those government-controlled religious organizations that will apply from “licenses from provincial religious affairs departments” and be granted these licenses, will be allowed to post online religious content. But not even all of the government-controlled religious communities will receive these licenses, and they will still face a number of limitations. For all the others, and for all individuals without exception, posting online religious-related content will become a major crime.

As for those authorized, they will be “prohibited from business promotions in the name of religion, distributing religious supplies and publications, establishing religious organizations and venues and proselyting for religion.” Obviously, any religious community “opposing the leadership of the CCP” will be banned from the Internet once and for all.

Licensed religious organizations would be “allowed to preach and offer religious training only on their own network platforms built upon real-name registration systems.” Individual Internet users would not be allowed “to post or repost religious contents on the Internet.”

“No organizations or individuals,” including those licensed, “will be allowed to live stream or broadcast religious activities including praying, burning incense, worshipping or receiving baptism online in the form of text, photo, audio or video.”

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