Buildings have been stripped of their Arabic features, with Islamic architecture often replaced with traditional Chinese designs. Some mosques have even been torn down. Modifications were more systematic in areas with larger Muslim populations.
Mosque demolitions and modifications have been documented in Xinjiang, the northwestern region where hundreds of thousands of Turkic Muslims have been detained, and there has been some evidence of architectural changes elsewhere in China.
But our visual investigation is the first to document the scale and spread of the policy, finding that Beijing’s crackdown on Islamic culture has spread to almost every region of the country.
Investigation with a truly brilliant team of @YuanfenYang @upyorkshire @peterjandringa @evawxiao @inari_ta @maxharlow @leahyjoseph and @sunyu1117. Huge thanks to many of the wider @ftdata team for their help with this story too
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New: This is the story of how a luxury development in Antakya became an earthquake death trap — and a symbol of the rot in Turkey’s construction system.
The development was supposed to become a “a corner of paradise”, helping to turn the outskirts of Antakya into a gleaming metropolis. Yet 12 years on the Rönesans, a hulking iPhone shaped building with 249 flats, has collapsed into a heap of rubble.
Detailed forensic work will be required to establish what brought the 12-storey building down. But engineers who reviewed available evidence for @FT — including plans, construction photos and images of the ruins — pointed to potential explanations from its basic design and build.
Irpin has become a byword for the $105.5bn in infrastructural damage caused by Putin’s war. As many as 8,651 buildings in Irpin — half the total in the city — have been damaged by fighting.
On his daughter’s first birthday, Vitaly Farenyk took his family to the newly opened Giraffe mall on Soborna street. “You had this lovely playroom, you could leave the children there with each other, drink coffee and just enjoy life.” Today, little is left other than rubble.
The story centres around brilliant on the ground reporting from @JohnReedwrites, who spoke to agricultural workers like Mykola Gordiychuk, who had a farm in the path of Russian forces. He told us that “if you don’t plant in time, you lose a year.”
We explain Ukraine's importance to food and agriculture, not just for its own population but people around the world. More than half Ukraine's land was used for growing crops in 2019, and products from its wheat, corn and sunflowers can be found in markets from Estonia to Egypt.
New with @ChrisGiles_: FT analysis shows the UK will be under far less pressure to raise taxes in the coming years to pay for the costs of the country’s ageing population because of falling birth rates, declining life expectancy and rising immigration. 1/4 ft.com/content/700206…
The changing demographic trends mean the government will have to find just £13bn in extra taxation to fund public services each year by the end of the decade, or 0.4% of national income, instead of the £69bn implied by previous estimates - a shift felt through the decades. 2/4
Why? Rising immigration and falling life expectancy (both good for public finances), but the biggest change is in fertility rates. Recent generations are having far fewer children, with a steady decline evident over the past 55 years. 3/4