China enforces new law to strengthen state control over Tibetan Buddhism
- In Reports
- 04:42 PM, Feb 15, 2025
- Myind Staff
On December 1, 2024, China's main regulatory body for recognised religions, the State Administration for Religious Affairs, introduced a revised version of the Measures for the Administration of Tibetan Buddhist Temples.
The new law was adopted in September 2024 and went into effect on January 1, 2025. The Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD) reported that the law "greatly increased state control over Tibetan religious practice by integrating political directives into Tibetan religious administration." To further integrate governmental ideology with religious practice, the amendment "adds explicit political conditions. By making these demands legally binding, the CCP strengthens its hold over monasteries and clergy," the TCHRD report said.
The report emphasised that to "'create a strong sense of community for the Chinese nation,' Tibetan Buddhists are subtly under pressure to integrate their unique culture and identity into the prevailing Han Chinese framework." This policy aligns with China's broader efforts to assimilate Tibetan culture and "fits in with the CCP's overarching objective of sinicising religion." "Political loyalty criteria in religious administration, therefore methodically enforcing the Chinese Communist Party's ideological grip over Tibetan Buddhism" is what the amended Measures for the Administration of Tibetan Buddhist Temples implement.
Article 36 of the Constitution, which "expressly grants citizens the right to freedom of religious belief," and Article 11 of the Regional National Autonomy Law are two legal protections that are undermined by these actions, according to TCHRD.“These actions are a part of the larger state efforts to integrate Tibetan spiritual and cultural identity into the dominant Han identity," it said."The Chinese government has significantly escalated its suppression of religious freedom in Tibet in the last decade," said Dawa Tashi, a researcher at TCHRD. "Through coercive 'patriotic education' campaigns designed to instil loyalty, strict control over monastic institutions, and widespread arbitrary arrests and detentions, authorities have tightened their grip. Today, religion in Tibet is not just regulated--it is ruled with an iron fist.
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