The monastic encampment of Larung Gar was once home to more than 10,000 devotees, their self-built red wooden homes sprawled across a valley in a remote corner of the southwestern province of Sichuan.
But an eight-month demolition and expulsion campaign that ended last April has reduced the population by at least half and destroyed huge swathes of the houses.
Now further drastic changes are on the horizon, with authorities preparing to split the encampment's academy and monastery into two separate sections divided by a wall, according to an official pamphlet issued around August and obtained by HRW. AFP was not able to independently verify its authenticity.
The pamphlet outlined measures including student quotas and real-name registration for residents and visitors, with monks, nuns and laypeople required to wear different coloured tags.
New finance, propaganda, education and security roles will be created and given to 97 Communist party officials, who will live on-site, it said.
"The administrative takeover of Larung Gar by Party officials shows that the government's aim was not merely to reduce numbers at the settlement," said Sophie Richardson, HRW's China director.
China's constitution guarantees freedom of religious belief, a principle that Beijing says it upholds.
However in recent weeks, authorities have demolished a Christian megachurch in northern China and banned schoolchildren from visiting mosques in a county in the northwest.
The pamphlet released by HRW states that 40 percent of classes at the institute must now be about politics and other non-religious subjects.
The top criteria for admission into the academy will be "a firm political stand, accepting the Great Motherland, the Chinese [Zhonghua] people, Chinese culture, the Chinese Communist Party and socialism with Chinese characteristics", it said.
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