From China with live - Chinese city hotels asked to turn away people from five
Muslim countries
BEIJING: Police have ordered some low-end hotels in the Chinese
metropolis of Guangzhou not to allow guests from five Muslim-majority countries
to stay, though China’s foreign ministry said it had never heard of the policy.
Three hotels with rooms costing about $23 a night said they had received
police notices as early as March, telling them to turn away people from
Pakistan, Syria, Iraq, Turkey and Afghanistan.
“I’m not clear about the reason. We just can’t take them,” one hotel
worker said by telephone.
The notice appears only to apply to cheaper hotels at the bottom of the
price scale.
All of the five countries have been beset by terrorist attacks in the
past few years, or in the case of Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan have been in
states of war.
Hong Kong’s South China Morning Post said on Friday the rule appeared to
be a security measure coinciding with a development forum being held in
Guangzhou this week, and also ahead of next week’s G20 summit in Hangzhou,
though the two cities are more than 1,000km apart.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Lu Kang said he was not aware that such an
order had been issued in Guangzhou. “I’ve never heard that there is this policy
being followed in China,” Lu told a daily news briefing.
“Moreover, as far as China is concerned, our policy in principle is that
we encourage people from China and other countries to have friendly exchanges
and are willing to provide various convenient policies in this regard.”
Published in Dawn, August 27th, 2016
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