Chinese authority has reportedly banned the nation's Muslim parents from giving radical names to their children.

A list of 29 names - including Jihad, Imam and Saddam - are said to bear 'separatist and religious tendencies', and have been prohibited by the authority of Muslim-dominant Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, according to media.

Muslims in Xinjiang have already been banned from keeping 'abnormal' beards or wearing veils in public places as China hardens its rhetoric on Islam.

The flyer, provided by the World Uighur Congress, is said to be the list of the 29 Muslim names that are banned by the Xinjiang police

The children of those who break the new rule would be denied their legal identity by their local police station, reported Radio Free Asia.

An officer from a police station in Ürümqi, the provincial capital of Xinjiang, is said to have confirmed the rule to a reporter from Radio Free Asia.

The officer said any babies with a banned name would not be able to obtain their Hukou, the birth registration in China. Officers at the Hukou registration counters would receive relevant training to identify what names are allowed.

Xinjiang is home to ethnic Uighur people, who follow Islam.

The new ban, known as 'Naming Rules For Ethnic Minorities', has been introduced to the residents of Xinjiang in the form of flyers, claimed the World Uyghur Congress.

The organisation, based in Germany, also claimed that this is not the first time certain names have been banned in Xinjiang.

A spokesman told MailOnline that in September, 2015, the authority blacklisted 12 Islamic names in Hotan Prefecture.

The new naming policy is thought to have derived from the 'Regulations on Extremisation of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region,' which was rolled out at the end of March.

Under the eighth clause in the second chapter, the document prohibited residents from 'spreading religious fanaticism through irregular beards or name selection'.

Residents in Muslim-dominant Xinjiang Province have already been banned from wearing veils in public. In the file photo (above) taken in 2002, Muslim Uighur women and a boy waited with food for the men to exit a mosque in Kashgar

The same document has placed a number of other bans on 'extremist behaviour' in Xinjiang, which is home to about 10 million Chinese Muslims.

For example, veils are not allowed to be worn in public places, and all residents must watch or listen to state media.

Just a month earlier, authority at Xinjiang's Bayingol Mongolian Autonomous Prefecture ordered all vehicles to be equipped with GPS-like tracking software in a bid to 'maintain stability'.

The Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, situated in far western China, is home to about 10 million Muslim residents

China claims that the legal, cultural and religious rights of Muslims in Xinjiang are fully protected.

However, the nation is also hardening its rhetoric on Islam, with top officials making repeated warnings about the spectre of global religious extremism seeping into the country.

IS released a video in late February purportedly showing Uighur fighters training in Iraq and vowing to strike China, according to the SITE Intelligence Group.

Last month, a top Communist party official from Xinjiang warned political leaders gathered in Beijing that China is becoming destabilised by the 'international anti-terror situation'.

The authority has also prohibited Uighur people in China from keeping 'abnormal' beards

Over the past year, regional leaders in Xinjiang have ramped up surveillance measures, police patrols and demonstrations amid an uptick in violence blamed on Islamic separatists.

Some scholars question whether global jihadi networks have indeed penetrated the country.

However, top Chinese officials, including those overseeing areas outside Xinjiang, are increasingly echoing certain strands of international discourse to back up claims that Islamic extremism is growing worldwide and needs to be rolled back.