Citations:Tongxin
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English citations of Tongxin
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- [1978 October 30 [1978 October 27], “Views Military Exercise”, in Daily Report: People's Republic of China[2], volume I, number 210, Foreign Broadcast Information Service, sourced from Peking NCNA Domestic Service, translation of original in Mandarin, →ISSN, →OCLC, People's Republuc of China: Northwest Region, page M 2[3]:
- Also on the afternoon of 27 October, Ulanfu and other members of the delegation met with representatives of minority nationalities from Kuyuan Prefecture, A-la-shan East Banner and Tunghsin County, representatives of people from the old revolutionary base in Yenchih County and representatives from 10 Hui autonomous counties (districts) and 2 Hui autonomous prefectures in the autonomous region and provinces concerned, who were in Yinchuan to attend the celebration, and had their pictures taken with them.]
- [1979 February, Yu-huai Ma, “Twenty Years of the Ningsia Hui Autonomous Region”, in China Reconstructs[4], volume XXVIII, number 2, Peking, →OCLC, page 34, column 2[5]:
- In Tunghsin and Haiyuan counties north of the Liupan Mountains the Red Army helped the Hui people set up the Yuhai Hui Autonomous Government in August 1936, the first self-governing Hui power in Chinese history.]
- 1996 May 14, Richard Tomlinson, “Poverty Meets Consumerism in Inland China”, in The New York Times[7], →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 29 December 2022, World[8]:
- At the bottom of Ningxia's economic ladder are peasants like Ma Junyi, 65, who lives in a cave he burrowed out of a hillside in Tongxin county, 120 miles south of Yinchuan. The average annual per capita income for Tongxin's farmers is $50, which puts Mr. Ma and his neighbors in the village of Wudaoling above the government's official poverty line.
- 2019 September 26, Emily Feng, “'Afraid We Will Become The Next Xinjiang': China's Hui Muslims Face Crackdown”, in NPR[9], archived from the original on 26 September 2019[10]:
- In August 2018, in Ningxia's Tongxin county, authorities attempted to demolish the Weizhou Grand Mosque, claiming it lacked the right building permits. […]
In Ningxia's Tongxin county, a rare female-only Islamic school once renowned across China's north-central and west is being readied for demolition after it was shut down last year to make way for residential development.