USCIRF Releases Report on China’s Sinicization of Religion Policy

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Washington, DC – The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF) today released the following new report:

Sinicization of Religion: China’s Coercive Religious Policy – Under Xi Jinping’s rule as the paramount leader of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), the government has implemented the coercive “sinicization of religion” policy, which has fundamentally transformed China’s religious environment. Sinicization, or the complete subordination of religious groups to the CCP’s political agenda and Marxist vision for religion, has become the core driving principle of the government’s management of religious affairs. Through regulations and state-controlled religious organizations, authorities incorporate CCP ideology into every facet of religious life for Buddhists, Catholic and Protestant Christians, Muslims, and Taoists. They also forcibly eradicate religious elements considered contradictory to the CCP’s political and policy agenda with ultranationalist overtones. Government officials have installed CCP loyalists as leading religious figures, altered houses of worship with CCP-approved architecture, integrated CCP propaganda into religious doctrines, and otherwise criminalized non-CCP-backed religious activities, all with the goal to ensure the stability of CCP rule. These government measures have routinely violated the internationally protected right to freedom of religion or belief.

In its 2024 Annual Report, USCIRF recommended that the U.S. Department of State redesignate China as a “Country of Particular Concern,” or CPC, for engaging in systematic, ongoing, and egregious violations of religious freedom. In January, USCIRF released a report analyzing the U.S. government’s technology policy amid China’s technology-enabled religious freedom violations, transitional repression, and malign political influence in the United States. Similarly, USCIRF authored an op-ed in October 2023 highlighting China’s political interference through lobbying in the U.S. Congress.