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Posts Tagged ‘tibet’

Tibetan writers arrested

September 7th, 2010 No comments

Sep 7, 2010
BEIJING – TWO Tibetan journalists have been arrested in north-western China after writing about a government crackdown on 2008 ethnic unrest in Tibet, a press freedom group said on Tuesday.

The writers, identified as Buddha and Kalsang Jinpa, were taken into police custody in Qinghai province in June and July respectively, and were accused of ‘separatism,’ the Paris-based Reporters Without Borders said in a statement.

It said the arrests bring the number of Tibetan journalists and writers jailed in China to 15, ‘almost half the number of journalists detained in China’ for their writings.

At least another 50 Tibetans are in custody for sending information abroad, the group said, without elaborating.

‘There has been no let-up in these arrests since March 2008 and their effect is to drastically curtail the ability of Tibetan intellectuals to make their voices heard,’ the group said, while demanding the pair’s release.

The India-based Tibet Post International said the two writers were arrested after publishing their articles outside China. Police in Xining, the capital of Qinghai province, denied any knowledge of the matter when contacted by AFP. — AFP

Tibetans shot by China police in mine dispute: report

August 29th, 2010 No comments


(AFP)
BEIJING — At least four Tibetans may have been killed and 30 others hurt when Chinese police fired on crowds protesting the expansion of mine operations blamed for environmental damage, a report said Saturday.

The shooting occurred August 17 in a remote region of southwestern China’s Sichuan province with a history of seething unrest involving the area’s Tibetan community, US-based Radio Free Asia said.

Quoting exiled Tibetans with sources in the region, the report said the confrontation began on or around August 13 when a group of Tibetans went to the Palyul county government headquarters to protest.

They complained that stepped-up Chinese gold-mining operations had brought large numbers of people and heavy machinery to the area, damaging farmland and the local grassland habitat, it said.

County officials rejected the accusations and had the demonstrators detained, touching off a steadily escalating confrontation that lead to the August 17 shootings.

Some of those injured were severely hurt, it said. Two police officers also were reportedly injured that day.

It quoted a county government official saying negotiations were under way to settle the dispute.

Local police denied knowledge of any confrontation when reached by AFP via phone. Calls to the county government went unanswered.

Palyul is in the Garze Tibetan Autonomous prefecture, one of many areas of the Tibetan plateau hit by widespread anti-Chinese rioting in March 2008 that was met with a massive security clampdown.

Tibetans Protest Over Land

June 4th, 2010 No comments

2010-06-03
Residents of a quake-stricken county are angrily rejecting plans to move them from their land.


HONG KONG—Scores of Tibetan residents of an earthquake-damaged western Chinese county are protesting local government plans to take possession of choice properties to reconstruct ravaged homes, schools, offices, and other sites, Tibetan sources say.

Some properties claimed by the authorities suffered no damage in the April earthquake, which left nearly 3,000 people dead, according to Tibetans in Yushu county, Qinghai province, as well as Tibetans in exile who said they have been in touch with relatives there.

“The local government has forced local residents out of their houses—they said they had to clean the area to build office buildings, schools, and parks, and they are planning to take away the sites for our homes and our fields,” one Yushu resident said.

“This has upset the local Tibetans, and they have argued the land has belonged to them for generations. So they have been going to the local government office in their hundreds over the last few days,” he said.

“Every day there are about 100 Tibetans protesting and appealing for the right to return to their land and fields, but the local authorities didn’t listen.”

Another Tibetan from Yushu said that one of his friends had seen “several hundreds” of Tibetans at the protest.

He said he was unsure whether Tibetans or monks had been taken away by police, but suggested that “people don’t want to talk about it out of fear.”

The man said many local Tibetan families are unwilling to accept the government’s offer of 80 square meter (860 square foot) homes as compensation for handing over their land.

“We Tibetans always have big families with many family members living together. Therefore, an 80 square meter unit is too small for them,” the Yushu resident said.

Officials dispatched
A local police officer, contacted by telephone, confirmed that incidents were occurring but said, “I don’t have any clear information for you.”

But an official at the Yushu county government office said in a telephone interview that more than 1,000 Tibetan protesters had been stationed in front of the building for days, demanding a resolution to the land dispute issue.

The woman, who did not give her name, said officials had been dispatched to talk to the protesters.

“[The petitioners] wanted to speak with some officials and they were able to do so. But not [Chinese Vice President] Xi Jinping. The incident is still unresolved. They say their land has been taken away by the government and they want it back—want their homes back. They have petitioned here every day, though there are less people today,” she said.

No Tibetans had been arrested, the official said.

Police blocked Tibetan protesters from approaching Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping when he visited the area on Wednesday, another resident confirmed.

‘The best sites’

A Yushu native who now lives in the United States said his family who remain there have complained that the “local government selected the best sites for the construction of government offices, schools, and public parks.”

“The Tibetans who are government employees are following government instructions, but the others have appealed to revoke these decisions. They also protested … and argued with the officials that whether they have lived 10 or 20 years in the area, they will not move from these sites.”

“Even during the Cultural Revolution, many Tibetans lost their loved ones but they insisted on staying on the land of their ancestors.”

Another Tibetan who now lives in New York, and who still has family members living in Yushu, said that the Chinese government had begun to construct small apartment units for relocation far from Yushu, which he described as ill-suited to the local Tibetan lifestyle.

“Local Tibetans are trying to stop the government from building these small apartment units. They prefer assistance from international charity organizations or would rather slowly build their own houses than live in these government-provided small dwellings.”

Praise for monks
The Yushu native said Tibetans from the area are largely self-sufficient and praised Tibetan monks for their quick efforts in providing relief materials to victims of the April 14 earthquake.

“Some victims didn’t get anything from the government even three or four weeks after the earthquake because the relief materials had to go through many checks and verifications. Tibetan monks hand-delivered relief supplies to each victim without delay.”

Kunga Tashi, the Chinese liaison officer in the office of Tibet in New York City expressed regret that Tibetan monks had been forced by the government to leave the disaster area soon after the earthquake.

“The religious beliefs of Tibetan monks maintain that good deeds should be done for ordinary people. But to expel them from the disaster area for an unclear reason has injured their souls and may lead to some kind of instability in the long run,” Kunga Tashi said.

Soon after the quake, China’s powerful propaganda department called for curbs on reporting of “negative news” about the earthquake that struck Yushu.

In its April 25 directive to news organizations, the central propaganda department warned state media not to focus too much on the relief work carried out by Tibetans themselves in the worst-hit regions of the remote province.

“Talk of the earthquake in ‘scientific terms;’ do not criticize the earthquake forecasting agency; do not focus too much on the efforts by Buddhist monks to help the victims; and give extensive coverage to the appeals for donations organized by state-owned CCTV,” the directive said.

Tibetan residents of Yushu said state-run media coverage of the rescue and clean-up operation was already far from reflecting the situation on the ground.

China’s official Xinhua news agency says about 2,700 people died in the quake, while Tibetans estimates are much higher.

Tibetan gets suspended death sentence for riots

May 27th, 2010 No comments

BEIJING — A court in Lhasa has given a Tibetan a suspended death sentence for taking part in riots that erupted in the remote Himalayan region two years ago, an overseas Tibetan rights group said.

The Dharamsala, India-based Tibetan Center for Human Rights and Democracy said in a statement late Wednesday that the Lhasa Intermediate People’s Court sentenced Sonam Tsering, 23, to death with a two-year reprieve on Tuesday. Such sentences are usually commuted to life in prison.

It said Sonam Tsering is the seventh Tibetan so far to be sentenced to death for the riots, including two already executed.

Rioting that broke out in Lhasa on March 14, 2008, left 22 people dead and led to the most sustained Tibetan uprising against Chinese rule in decades.

Beijing says the demonstrations were part of a violent campaign organized by the Dalai Lama and his supporters to throw off Chinese rule in Tibet and sabotage the Beijing Olympics in August 2008.

The Dalai Lama, who fled Tibet 50 years ago amid an uprising against Chinese rule, has denied the charge and says he seeks only significant autonomy for Tibet under continued Chinese rule.

The Lhasa court on Tuesday also ordered jail terms of between three and seven years for five other Tibetans convicted of harboring Sonam Tsering in their homes following the riots and helping him prepare to flee abroad, it said. He disappeared after the riots but was arrested 17 months later in October last year, it said.

Sonam Tsering was born in Ganzi, a predominantly Tibetan prefecture in southwest China’s Sichuan province. He made a pilgrimage to Lhasa in 2007, then stayed on, the center said.

The center reported that the Lhasa court heard that he rioted and led others to riot by setting cars and shops on fire and overturning police vehicles. While standing on top of a police vehicle, he wielded a knife in the air and loudly shouted anti-government slogans, it said.

Lhasa government and court officials refused to confirm the ruling and said they had no knowledge of the case.

A female Tibetan staff member who answered the phone at the Communist Party Propaganda Office in Lhasa said she didn’t know about the case. She gave her name as Sola — many Tibetans use just one name.

Two women reached by phone at the Lhasa court said they had not heard about the case. Both refused to give their names.

70 held in Lhasa on Day 1 of Tibet ‘strike hard’ campaign

March 10th, 2010 No comments

(TibetanReview.net, Mar06, 2010)  Seventy Tibetans have been held from rental houses along Sera Road in Tibet’s capital Lhasa on Mar 2 evening under a “strike hard” campaign launched that morning ahead of the 51st anniversary on Mar 10 of the Tibetan National Uprising Day. Citing Lhasa Evening News (Chinese) Mar 3, Dharamsala-based Tibet Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD) Mar 3 said the 70 were held for being without their ID. Security has been greatly strengthened with deployment of additional forces not only in Lhasa but across the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), the report added.

The duration of the campaign has not been mentioned; TCHRD feels that it would continue for months.

TCHRD quoted the Lhasa Evening News report as saying: “The Lhasa City Public Security Bureau (PSB) officials under the order of Lhasa City government, the TAR PSB, TAR Party Committee and Lhasa City Party Committee had carried out the ‘Strike Hard’ Campaign from 9:00PM (Beijing standard time) yesterday across the Tibetan Capital, Lhasa….the campaign was also launched across all seven prefectures under the TAR in order to strike hard according to law against all kinds of criminal activity and to vigorously uphold the social order and stability.”

TCHRD said armed security forces had been deployed at all the strategic locations in Lhasa with setting up of barricades, vehicles entering the city or going out of it being strictly checked, and homes of the Tibetan people as well as guesthouses being searched or raided at random.

The centre sees the campaign as a prelude to large scale arbitrary arrests and detentions ahead of the Mar 10 uprising anniversary.

The current strike is seen as being more intense and widespread than in earlier times under similar circumstances, indicating a more hardline approach to dealing with the situation in Tibet.

Tibetans protest over jailed monk in southwest China

December 8th, 2009 No comments

The Associated Press
Date: Tuesday Dec. 8, 2009 6:30 AM ET
BEIJING — Security has been stepped up in a Tibetan area in western China following several protests calling for a retrial for a revered monk jailed by Chinese authorities for independence activities. Read more…

Categories: resistance, state security Tags: ,

Xinjiang riot aftermath

July 20th, 2009 No comments

Nurmen Met held photographs of his sons, 19 and 21, who he said had been taken by riot officers as they entered the public bathhouse his family owns. Read more…