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Politics

Afghanistan evacuations pace up amid reviews of Taliban violence, crackdown on ladies

People wait to be evacuated from Afghanistan at the airport in Kabul on August 18, 2021 following the Taliban stunning takeover of the country. (Photo by – / AFP) (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)

– | AFP | Getty Images

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Evacuations from Kabul’s Hamid Karzai International Airport picked up pace Wednesday after a frenzied and deadly start to the week as foreigners and Afghans scramble to get out of the country now under control of the Taliban.

Thousands of diplomats and aid workers have been evacuated, according to Western governments, along with at least several hundred Afghans, though the exact numbers remain unclear.

More than 2,200 diplomats and other civilian workers have been evacuated on military flights, according to Reuters, citing an anonymous security official, though the nationalities of the evacuees have not been confirmed and it is not known whether that figure includes the more than 600 Afghans crammed onto a U.S. C-17 aircraft that took them to Qatar.

Evacuees crowd the interior of a U.S. Air Force C-17 Globemaster III transport aircraft, carrying some 640 Afghans to Qatar from Kabul, Afghanistan August 15, 2021.

Courtesy of Defense One | Handout via Reuters

The British government says it is taking approximately 1,000 people per day out of Afghanistan. “We’re still bringing out British nationals … and those Afghan nationals who are part of our locally employed scheme,” U.K. Interior Minister Priti Patel told the BBC on Wednesday.

The Pentagon’s goal is to get 5,000 to 9,000 people out of Kabul daily, said Army Maj. Gen. Hank Taylor, deputy director of the Joint Staff for regional operations, said at a news conference Tuesday.

Taylor expects a departure tempo of one U.S. military cargo aircraft per hour. He said about 4,000 U.S. troops are stationed in the capital to aid in the evacuation efforts and provide security.

Taliban promise rights, amnesty

The missions are being carried out as the Taliban lay out for the world what they claim their leadership will look like — and as reports surface of fresh brutality by the militants.

In a somewhat surreal press conference Tuesday night, a spokesman for the militant Islamic group, infamous for its brutal executions and oppression of dissenters, women, and anyone who fell afoul of its ultraconservative rules, promised rights for women and the press and amnesty for government officials.

“I would like to assure the international community, including the United States, that nobody will be harmed,” Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told reporters. “We don’t want any internal or external enemies.”

He said the Taliban would ensure safety for anyone who laid down their weapons, regardless of their past affiliations, and would allow women to work and go to school, but “within the framework of Islam” — a vague parameter given the extreme interpretation of the religion that the group is known for.

Reports of human rights violations by Taliban fighters have surfaced in other parts of the country in recent weeks, and many Afghans remain desperate to flee the country for fear of reprisal for their role in helping U.S. and allied forces. Whether the group will stay true to its word is yet to be seen.

NBC News’ Richard Engel said local media reported that Taliban fighters killed two demonstrators at a protest in Jalalabad.

Reports of violence, blocked routes to airport

In contrast to the conciliatory image Taliban representatives attempted to convey during their press conference Tuesday, reports are surfacing from Kabul and around the country of beatings, shootings of civilians and women being barred from educational institutions by Taliban members.

Despite promises of “safe passage” to Kabul airport for those who want to leave the country, the State Department has received reports of people being turned away, pushed back and beaten when trying to access the airport, national security advisor Jake Sullivan told reporters on Tuesday.

Photos published by NBC on Wednesday and taken by a Los Angeles Times reporter show bloodied adults and children in Kabul after being beaten by Taliban militants. The group’s officials deny their fighters took part in any such violence, insisting it was carried out by men impersonating the Taliban.

Women are also describing being blocked from their places of work and education by Taliban members, in contradiction of the group’s pledge to continue to allow women to participate in the workforce and go to school.

“Taliban didn’t allow my ex-colleague here in @TOLOnews and famous anchor of the State-owned @rtapashto Shabnam Dawran to start her work today,” Miraqa Popal, head of news at Afghan broadcaster Tolo News, wrote on Twitter on Wednesday, along with a video of his colleague recounting the event.

“Despite wearing a hijab & carrying correct ID, I was told by Taliban: The regime has changed. Go home,” Dawran, the female anchor, says in the video, according to Popal.

Read more on the developments in Afghanistan:

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Politics

Treasury slaps sanctions on Cuban police power and its leaders over crackdown on protests

A woman holds a sign reading “America Open Your Eyes” as people wave Cuban and US flags during a Freedom Rally showing support for Cubans demonstrating against their government, at Freedom Tower in Miami, on July 17, 2021. – Cuba’s President Miguel Diaz-Canel on July 17, denounced what he said was a false narrative over unrest on the Caribbean island, as the Communist regime vigorously pushed back against suggestions of historically widespread discontent. (Photo by Eva Marie UZCATEGUI / AFP) (Photo by EVA MARIE UZCATEGUI/AFP via Getty Images)

EVA MARIE UZCATEGUI | AFP | Getty Images

WASHINGTON – The Biden administration imposed another round of sanctions on Cuba’s police force and its leaders for the violent suppression of peaceful protests that broke out on the island more than two weeks ago.

The Treasury sanctions designate Cuban police director Oscar Callejas Valcarce and his deputy, Eddy Sierra Arias, as well as the island’s police force.

“The Treasury Department will continue to designate and call out by name those who facilitate the Cuban regime’s involvement in serious human rights abuse,” wrote Andrea Gacki, director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control, in a statement announcing the sanctions.

“Today’s action serves to further hold accountable those responsible for suppressing the Cuban people’s calls for freedom and respect for human rights,” the statement added.

Last week, Washington slapped sanctions on Cuba’s defense minister and the communist nation’s special forces brigade for the suppression of peaceful protests that broke out on the island.

The U.S. sanctions were coupled with a warning that there would be more to come if the Cuban government did not rectify the situation.

“This is just the beginning – the United States will continue to sanction individuals responsible for oppression of the Cuban people,” President Joe Biden said in a July 22 statement.

Earlier this month, thousands of protestors filled the streets over frustrations with a crippled economy hit by food and power shortages.

The rare protests, the largest the communist country has seen since the 1990s, come as the government struggles to contain the coronavirus pandemic, pushing the island’s fragile health-care system to the brink.

Protesters gather in front of the Versailles restaurant to show support for the people in Cuba who have taken to the streets there to protest on July 11, 2021 in Miami, Florida.

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

Cuban President Diaz-Canel Bermudez said his regime was “prepared to do anything” to quell the protests, according to a report from The Washington Post.

“We will be battling in the streets,” he said, adding that the United States is in part to blame for the widespread discontent in Cuba.

A day later, he appeared alongside members of his government and blamed U.S. trade sanctions for hampering Cuba’s growth.

Reacting to the Cuban president’s comments, Secretary of State Antony Blinken told reporters last week that the United States was not to blame for the laundry list of issues plaguing Havana.

Blinken said Cubans were “tired of the mismanagement of the Cuban economy, tired of the lack of adequate food and, of course, an adequate response to the Covid-19 pandemic.”

“That is what we are hearing and seeing in Cuba, and that is a reflection of the Cuban people, not of the United States or any other outside actor,” Blinken said.

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World News

Crackdown on Didi and firms prefer it may value China as a lot as $45 trillion by 2030

A navigation map on the app of Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi is seen on a mobile phone in front of the app logo displayed in this illustration picture taken July 1, 2021.

Florence Lo | Reuters

This was a clarifying week for global investors — or for anyone concerned about authoritarian capitalism — of just how much the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) would be willing to pay to ensure its dominance.

The answer, according to a rough calculation from a new partnership formed by the Rhodium Group and the Atlantic Council, is as much as $45 trillion in new capital flows into and out of China by 2030, if the party were willing to pursue serious reform. It’s an immeasurable loss of economic dynamism.

Zoom In IconArrows pointing outwards

Graph courtesy of the Rhodium Group and Atlantic Council GeoEconomics Center’s China Pathfinder Project

What is clear is that Chinese President Xi Jinping, during this month’s celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the CCP, has sent an unmistakable message at home and abroad of who is in charge.

Chinese domestic companies, particularly of the tech and data-rich variety, will be more likely to shun Western capital markets and adhere to party preferences. Foreign investors, only too happy to accept risk for the long-proven upside of Chinese stocks, now must factor in a growing risk premium as Xi tightens the screws.

“Wall Street must now acknowledge that the risk of investing in these companies can’t be known, much less disclosed,” writes Josh Rogin in the Washington Post. “Therefore, U.S. investors shouldn’t be trusting their futures to China Inc.”

The story that triggered this week’s stir was the $4.4 billion U.S. initial public offering (IPO) of the world’s largest ride-hailing and food delivery service, Didi. The ripples could be long-lasting and far-reaching for the lucrative relations between China and Wall Street. Dealogic shows that Chinese companies have raised $26 billion from new U.S. listings in 2020 and 2021.

Until this week, the greatest concern for investors was that new US accounting rules would stymie that flow. It is now more likely to be Chinese regulators themselves who plug the spigot.

The facts are that Didi Global began trading on the New York Stock Exchange on June 30, auspiciously one day ahead of the CCP centennial celebration.

One early hint of trouble was that the company played down the blockbuster listing. Not only did company officials resist the usual routine of ringing the opening bell. They went further by instructing their employees not to call attention to the event on social networks.

Still, Didi’s shares rose 16% on the second day of trading, setting the company’s market value at nearly $80 billion.     

But by July 2, Chinese regulators put Didi under cybersecurity review, banned it from accepting new users, and then, in the next days, went even further by instructing app stores to stop offering Didi’s app.

Credit all of that to a mixture of increasingly authoritarian politics, regulatory concerns over data privacy and U.S. markets, and the continual expanding of fronts in the U.S.-Chinese contest.

The cost to investors by Friday was a drop to only 67% of the stock’s original value. If that’s as far as the downside goes and if the regulatory retaliation against Didi stops where it is, this week could still be dubbed a win by Didi executives.

The more serious matter is the wider chilling effect, coming in the context of a series of stalled or reversed Chinese economic and marketization reforms.

The latest came on Thursday, when The Wall Street Journal reported that the Cyberspace Administration of China, which reports to Xi, would police all overseas market listings.

On that same day, Chinese medical data firm LinkDoc became the first Chinese company to ditch its IPO after the Didi news. Expect more Chinese companies to shelve planned listings and for many others to remove them from consideration.

For all the billions of lost investment capital this could bring over the short term, the larger cost is one that could be measured in trillions of dollars of endangered potential as Xi consistently backs away from the market liberalizations he once appeared to champion.

The story could not be more clearly written than through the accompanying chart from Rhodium and the Atlantic Council’s GeoEconomics Center. From 2000 to 2018, China’s economic growth shook the world as it expanded its share of the global gross domestic product (GDP) from 4% to 16%. China enjoyed similar growth in goods exports and imports.

Zoom In IconArrows pointing outwards

Graph courtesy of the Rhodium Group and Atlantic Council GeoEconomics Center’s China Pathfinder Project

At the same time, however, China’s inward portfolio investment grew from near zero to just 2% of the global total while its outward portfolio investment grew from near zero to only 1%. This is not just unachieved potential from the past — it is now also the deeply endangered potential for the future that could equal the estimate $45 trillion through 2030.

In a must-read analysis of the Chinese economy in Foreign Affairs, Atlantic Council nonresident senior fellow Daniel Rosen, who is also a Rhodium Group founding partner, argues that China under Xi has repeatedly attempted to reform the Chinese economy, only to pull back. The accompanying chart provides a useful overview of what has become habit.

Zoom In IconArrows pointing outwards

Graph courtesy of the Rhodium Group and Atlantic Council GeoEconomics Center’s China Pathfinder Project

“The consequences of that failure are clear,” Rosen writes. Since Xi took control, total debt has risen to at least 276% of GDP from 225%. It now takes 10 yuan of new credit, up from six, to create one yuan of growth. GDP growth fell to 6% in the year ahead of the pandemic from 9.6%.

Writes Rosen: “At some point, China’s leaders must confront this tradeoff: [S]ustainable economic efficiency and political omnipotence do not go hand in hand.”

Conventional wisdom has it that the West was naïve to think that China’s economic growth and modernization, which the West so enthusiastically supported, would eventually bring with it political liberalization. Now the conventional wisdom is that China has shown it can be brutally authoritarian and economically dynamic simultaneously.

What’s probably more true is that Xi may soon face the contradictions between his simultaneous desire for economic dynamism and increased authoritarian control. History shows he cannot have both, but for the moment, Xi appears willing to risk the dynamism in favor of the control.

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World News

G-20 monetary leaders agree to maneuver ahead on plan for a world tax crackdown

Italian carabinieri guard St. Mark’s Square, the day before the meeting of G20 finance ministers and central bankers in Venice on July 8, 2021.

ANDREAS SOLARO | AFP | Getty Images

The group of 20 major economies’ financiers said they had agreed on a “more stable and fairer international tax architecture,” according to a communique from Saturday’s meeting.

The G-20 is a forum for the governments and central bank governors of 20 major economies. At a meeting of the group’s finance ministers and central bank governors, leaders endorsed components of a tax plan, including multinational corporate profits redistribution and a global minimum tax, after “many years of discussion and building on the progress made over the past year.” They write.

The group aims to see national leaders adopt the plan at a G-20 summit in October.

According to Reuters, the pact would set a minimum global corporate tax of at least 15% to prevent multinational companies from shopping at the lowest tax rate. The deal would also change the way companies like Amazon and Alphabets Google are taxed, based in part on where they sell products and services rather than where their headquarters are located.

Reuters reported that Federal Finance Minister Olaf Scholz had confirmed that all G-20 economies were on board the pact. Meanwhile, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said a handful of smaller countries are still against it, including low-tax countries like Ireland and Hungary, but are being encouraged to join by October.

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World News

China’s Crackdown on Hong Kong

In the year since China passed a sweeping national security law for Hong Kong, the mainland government has steadily tightened its grip on the city, quashing the pro-democracy movement.

Officials said they would censor Hong Kong films that they considered a threat to Beijing’s sovereignty, a sharp slap to the city’s artistic spirit. In March, Pro-Beijing lawmakers called for work by the dissident artist Ai Weiwei to be barred from a museum. Courts have sentenced pro-democracy activists to prison. And last week, the police raided Apple Daily, the biggest openly pro-democracy newspaper in the city, arrested its top editors and froze its bank accounts. Today, the newspaper said it would close this week.

Vivian Wang, who covers Hong Kong for The Times, updates us on the situation.

Claire: Last time we talked with you about Hong Kong in this newsletter was in March. What’s happened since?

Vivian: A lot has changed, but all in line with a general trend: increasingly harsh, and overt, suppression of the rights that made Hong Kong different from mainland China. An annual vigil on June 4, to commemorate the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre against pro-democracy protesters in Beijing, was banned.

Tell us about China’s involvement in Hong Kong’s elections.

China has overhauled Hong Kong’s election system. Before anyone can run for office, they will have to pass a screening committee set up by Beijing. The central government had gotten worried that pro-democracy residents were going to try to sweep the upcoming legislative elections. So Beijing passed another top-down order, as it had with the security law.

There are a few major changes. Only “patriots,” defined by a screening committee, will be allowed to run for office.

Also, in the past, half of the seats in the legislature were directly elected (the other half were reserved for representatives of industry groups, often dominated by pro-Beijing candidates). Now, less than a quarter will be directly elected.

Many pro-democracy leaders are in prison. What does that mean for the movement?

Those sentenced range from some of the most veteran pro-democracy leaders to people in their 20s who had been considered the next generation. The government is sending a message: Anyone who becomes too prominent, or too vocal, is putting themselves at risk. These figures were definitely important in boosting public morale and giving people someone to rally around.

On a logistical level, this may not change much. There basically haven’t been any protests or organized pro-democracy events in the past year, and the pro-democracy political parties are limited in what they can do, especially with the new election system.

You mentioned censorship. What does that mean for pop culture in Hong Kong?

Hong Kong has historically had a strong film industry, and it’s been trying to turn itself into an arts hub. But with the new rules around movie censorship, and other recent attempts to get artwork banned from museums, it’s hard to imagine how the city could keep up the reputation it wants.

There are still attempts to keep Hong Kong’s cultural world alive, notably through independent bookstores. But the mainland Chinese market is so big that many creators, especially in the corporate world, don’t want to alienate it. That will probably mean a shrinking space for anything critical.

What’s the mood inside the pro-democracy movement?

It’s still bleak. Some people say protesters will come out again when the pandemic fully ends and social distancing rules can’t be used anymore to ban public assembly. But many people I talk to say they are really scared.

For more: A 23-year-old protester is the first person charged under the security law to stand trial. He could face life in prison.

  • With almost all in-person ballots counted, Eric Adams was leading in the Democratic primary for New York City mayor. Maya Wiley was second.

  • Andrew Yang, the former presidential candidate, conceded.

  • These results are not final, and we may not know the winner for weeks. The city still has to count absentee ballots, as well as the ranked-choice votes. (New Yorkers could rank up to five candidates in order of preference.)

  • For more: A detailed map of how people voted, takeaways and the latest vote count.

Amazon bills its annual Prime Day as a “holiday.” For many of the company’s workers, it’s miserable, Alex Press writes in Jacobin.

The case surrounding Britney Spears’s conservatorship is back in court today, and The Times has obtained court records that provide a rare view of her perspective. Spears will address the court directly, although it’s unclear if she will make her remarks in public.

The conservatorship, which started in 2008, restricts Spears’s rights, prohibiting her from making most decisions. Her father, Jamie Spears, is the steward of her roughly $60 million fortune. Among the findings in the records: Spears, now 39, could not make friends or restain her kitchen cabinets without the approval of her father.

Conservatorships are supposed to be a last resort for people who cannot take care of themselves, such as older people with dementia. Spears’s case has drawn public scrutiny in part because she has regularly performed over the past decade.

Spears’s father and others involved in the conservatorship have maintained that it is a smooth-running machine that rescued the star after public struggles and concerns about her mental health. But the court records tell a different story: Spears has pushed for years to end the conservatorship. It “comes with a lot of fear,” she said.

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World News

Bitcoin (BTC) worth drops on China crypto mining crackdown

A bitcoin mine near Kongyuxiang, Sichuan, China on August 12, 2016.

Paul Ratje | The Washington Post | Getty Images

Bitcoin sank Monday on reports that China has intensified its crackdown on cryptocurrency mining.

The world’s largest digital currency fell 7% to a price of $32,801 Monday morning, dropping below $33,000 for the first time since June 8, according to data from Coin Metrics. It was last trading at $32,964 as of 5 a.m. ET. Smaller rivals like ether and XRP also tumbled, down 8% and 7% respectively.

Many bitcoin mines in Sichuan were shuttered Sunday after authorities in the southwestern Chinese province ordered a halt to crypto mining, according to a report from the Communist Party-backed newspaper Global Times. More than 90% of China’s bitcoin mining capacity is estimated to be shut down, the paper said.

Bloomberg and Reuters also reported on the move from Sichuan authorities. It follows similar developments in China’s Inner Mongolia and Yunnan regions, as well as calls from Beijing to stamp out crypto mining amid worries over its massive energy consumption.

This appears to have led to a significant decline in bitcoin’s hash rate — or processing power — which has fallen sharply in the last month, according to data from Blockchain.com. An estimated 65% of global bitcoin mining is done in China.

Bitcoin’s network is decentralized, meaning it doesn’t have any central party or middleman to approve transactions or generate new coins. Instead, the blockchain is maintained by so-called miners who race to solve complex math puzzles using purpose-built computers to validate transactions. Whoever wins that race is rewarded with bitcoin.

This power-intensive process has led to growing concerns over the potential environmental harm of bitcoin, with everyone from Tesla CEO Elon Musk to U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen raising the alarm. China, where most bitcoin mining is concentrated, relies heavily on coal power. Last month, a coal mine in the Xinjiang region flooded and shut down, taking nearly a quarter of bitcoin’s hash rate offline.

However, miners in China often migrate to places like Sichuan, which are rich in hydropower, in the rainy season. And some industry efforts have been launched — including the Bitcoin Mining Council and the Crypto Climate Accord — in an effort to reduce cryptocurrencies’ carbon footprint.

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World News

Army Crackdown in Myanmar Escalates With Killing of Protesters

Minutes after the ambulance left, an army truck stopped at the end of the street and soldiers opened fire on the group, said Dr. Si Thu. At this point the other two men were wounded, one in the chest and one in the arm.

Mr. Maung Maung Oo was taken to the Byamaso Social Association hospital where he died, said U Zar Ni, a doctor there. U Lei Lei, another doctor at the hospital, said a second protester also died there from a gunshot wound.

Later, after protesters in Mandalay largely dispersed, a woman was shot in the head and killed as police and soldiers cleared barricades and apparently fired arbitrarily at people in the street, a witness said. Dr. Tsar Ni said the woman, whose name was not published, was dead when she arrived at Byamaso Hospital.

In Yangon, Myanmar’s largest city, a protester named Hein Htut Aung, 23, was shot dead during a demonstration in Thingangyun Township. His death was confirmed by the Nadi Ayar Hospital, where he was taken. Another protester in Yangon, Nyi Nyi Aung Htet Naing, was also shot dead, according to family members. The last post on his Facebook page was “#How_Many_Dead_Bodies_UN_Need_To_Take_Action?”

When teachers gathered to demonstrate at another protest location in Yangon, police began firing tear gas and rubber bullets near them, and an elementary school teacher identified as Daw Tin Nwet Yi died of a heart attack, a witness said.

Police also arrested at least 100 medical students in Yangon as they prepared to march in their white coats in a separate protest, witnesses said. Doctors have spearheaded the civil disobedience movement, and many have refused to work in government hospitals, which the coup brought under military control.

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World News

China’s Crackdown on Muslims Extends to a Resort Island

SANYA, China – The call to prayer still echoes through the alleys of Sanya’s nearly 1,000-year-old Muslim quarter, with minarets with crescent moons rising over the roofs. The government’s crackdown on the tiny, deeply devout community in this southern Chinese city has been subtle.

Signs on shops and houses that read “Allahu akbar” – “God is the greatest” in Arabic – have been fitted with stickers an inch wide to advertise the “China Dream,” a nationalist official slogan. The Chinese characters for Halal, which means permissible in Islam, have been removed from restaurant signs and menus. The authorities have closed two Islamic schools and tried twice to exclude female students from wearing headscarves.

The Utsuls, a community of no more than 10,000 Muslims in Sanya, are among the recent targets of the Chinese Communist Party’s campaign against foreign influences and religions. Their problems show how Beijing is working to undermine the religious identity of even its smallest Muslim minorities in order to achieve a unified Chinese culture, the core of which is the Han ethnic majority.

The new restrictions in Sanya, a town on the holiday island of Hainan, mark a reversal of government policy. Until a few years ago, officials supported the Utsuls’ Islamic identity and ties to Muslim countries, according to local religious leaders and residents, who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid government retaliation.

The party has stated that its restrictions on Islam and the Muslim communities are designed to curb violent religious extremism. She has used this rationale to justify cracking down on Muslims in China’s westernmost region, Xinjiang, after a series of attacks seven years ago. But Sanya saw little unrest.

The tightening of control over the Utsuls “reveals the real face of China’s communist campaign against local communities,” said Ma Haiyun, an associate professor at Frostburg State University in Maryland who studies Islam in China. “The point here is to strengthen state control. It is purely against Islam. “

The Chinese government has repeatedly denied that it is against Islam. But under Xi Jinping, its supreme leader, the party has demolished mosques, old shrines, and Islamic domes and minarets in northwestern and central China. The crackdown focused heavily on the Uighurs, a Central Asian Muslim minority of 11 million in Xinjiang, many of whom were held in mass detention camps and forced to renounce Islam.

Efforts to “sinize” Islam accelerated in 2018 after the State Council, China’s cabinet, issued a confidential policy instructing officials to prevent the belief from interfering with the secular life and functions of the state. The directive warned of “Arabization” and the influence of Saudi Arabia or “Saudiization” in mosques and schools.

In Sanya, the party is persecuting a group with a significant position in China’s relations with the Islamic world. The Utsuls have hosted Muslims from across the country seeking the mild climes of Hainan Province, and they served as a bridge to Muslim communities in Southeast Asia and the Middle East.

The Islamic identity of the Utsuls has been celebrated by the government for years as China pushed for stronger ties with the Arab world. Such connections were key to Mr. Xi’s Belt and Road Initiative, a program to fund infrastructure projects around the world and strengthen Beijing’s political influence.

The Utsuls have become “an important base for Muslims who have moved abroad to find their roots and investigate their ancestors,” according to a 2017 government release that highlighted the role of Islam in Hainan in the belt- and street map was highlighted. “To date, they have welcomed thousands of scholars and friends from more than a dozen countries and regions and are an important window for cultural exchanges between people around the South China Sea.”

Although the Utsuls have been officially classified as part of China’s largest ethnic minority, the Hui, they see themselves as culturally different from other Muslim communities in the country.

These are Sunni Muslims believed to be descended from Cham, the long-distance fishermen and sea traders of the Champa kingdom that ruled the central and southern coast of Vietnam for centuries. As early as the 10th century, Cham refugees fled the war in what is now central Vietnam and traveled to Hainan, a tropical island the size of Maryland.

Over the centuries, the Utsuls maintained close ties with Southeast Asia and practiced Islam largely without restriction. But during the Cultural Revolution of the late 1960s and early 1970s, wandering Red Guard groups devoted to Mao Zedong destroyed mosques in Utsul villages as they did across China.

When China opened to the world in the early 1980s, the Utsuls began to revive their Islamic traditions. Many families have reconnected with long-lost relatives in Malaysia and Indonesia, including a former Malaysian Prime Minister, Abdullah Ahmad Badawi, whose maternal grandfather was a Utsul who grew up in Sanya.

To this day, many Utsuls, also known as Utsats, speak a particular Chamic language similar to the language used in parts of Vietnam and Cambodia, in addition to Chinese. A sour tamarind fish stew with Southeast Asian flavors remains the local specialty, and the elders pass on stories of their ancestors’ migration to Hainan. Women wear colored headscarves, sometimes beaded or embroidered, that cover their hair, ears and neck. This type is similar to headgear worn by Muslim women in Malaysia and Indonesia.

Yusuf Liu, a Malaysian-Chinese writer who has studied the Utsuls, said the group was able to maintain a distinct identity because they were geographically isolated and clinging to their religious beliefs for centuries. He noted that the Utsuls were similar to the Malaysians in many ways.

“They share many of the same qualities, including language, clothing, history, blood ties, and food,” said Mr. Liu.

As Sanya’s tourism economy boomed over the past two decades, so did the Utsuls’ relations with the Middle East. Young men traveled to Saudi Arabia to study Islam. Community leaders built schools for children and adults to learn Arabic. They began building domes and minarets for their mosques and turned away from traditional Chinese architectural styles.

Although there have been some clashes between the Utsuls and neighboring Han in the past few decades, they have largely lived in peace, with both groups benefiting from the recent surge in tourism. In contrast, Beijing has long tried to suppress Uighur resistance to Chinese violence, which has been violent at times. The party has said that its policies in Xinjiang have curbed what it calls terrorism and religious extremism.

But for the past two years, even in Sanya, authorities have been pressing to curtail overt beliefs and links with the Arab world.

Local mosque leaders said they should remove the speakers that broadcast the call to prayer from the minaret tops and place them on the floor – and, more recently, turn the volume down. The construction of a new mosque was halted after a dispute over its imposing dimensions and supposedly “Arab” architectural elements. The concrete skeleton is now collecting dust. The city has banned children under the age of 18 from studying Arabic.

Utsul residents said they wanted to learn Arabic not only to better understand Islamic texts but also to communicate with Arab tourists who came to their restaurants, hotels and mosques before the pandemic. Some residents expressed frustration at the new restrictions and questioned China’s promise to respect its 56 officially recognized ethnic groups.

A local religious leader who studied in Saudi Arabia for five years said the community had been told they were no longer allowed to build domes.

“The mosques in the Middle East are like that. We want to build ours so that they look like mosques and not just like houses, ”he said on condition of anonymity because some residents had recently been briefly arrested for criticizing the government. (As a sign of the sensitivity of the problem, half a dozen plainclothes police in Sanya questioned us about our reporting in mosques.)

The church has resisted at times. In September, Utsul parents and students protested outside schools and government offices after several public schools banned girls from wearing headscarves to class. Weeks later, authorities reversed the order, a rare bow to public pressure.

Still, the government sees the assimilation of China’s various ethnic minorities as the key to building a stronger nation.

“We need to use ethnic differences as a foundation to build a unified Chinese consciousness,” said Xiong Kunxin, professor of ethnic studies at Minzu University in Beijing. “This is the direction for China’s future development.”

The Utsuls are currently in an uncomfortable coexistence with the authorities.

In the center of the courtyard of the Nankai Mosque, a red Chinese flag flies at almost the same height as the tops of the minarets.

Keith Bradsher reported from Sanya and Amy Qin from Taipei, Taiwan. Amy Chang Chien contributed to coverage from Taipei.