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 Chinese shot Tibetans like a dog
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Posted on 03-16-08 12:22 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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 Yes, Chinese red army shot tibetan pilgrims shot like a dog. It was caputered by Romanian Journalist. No wonder why tibetan wants to make their Tibet independent from Tibet. Kudos to Free Tibet warriors.http://www.protv.ro/stiri/international/exclusive-footage-of-chinese-soldiers-shooting-at-tibetan-pilgrims.html

One more blog for free tibet: Lets update and expose chinese autocracy for Tibetans.

FREE TIBET FROM dautari.org

यो शब्द उच्चारण गर्न जति सजिलो छ त्यसको भाव उत्तिकै गहिरो छ। हिप्पीहरु "Free Tibet" लेखिएको टि-सर्ट लगाएर गांजामा लठ्ठीएर घाम ताप्दै सुतेको देख्दा लाग्छ तिब्बत सित्तैमा घुमेर यसै गरेर दंगदास भएर सुत्नु हो। पर्यटकबाट अर्थतन्त्रमा ठुलै टेवा पुगेको तिब्बतमा यो नारा हिमकाय देशको त्रासले फिरन्तेको टि-सर्टमा सिमत हुन पुगेको छ।
आधी शताब्दी अघीबाट आफ्नो पहिचान गुमाएको तिब्वत हिजो आज बर्षमा १ पटक अझै चर्चामा आउने गर्छ। तर यस पटकको चर्चा भने लामै समयसम्म रह्यो। अझ भन्नु पर्दा आजको दिन सम्म तिब्वतको खबरले समाचारमा ठाउ ओगटिरहेकोछ। करिब करिब यो खबरबाट बेखबर नेपाली पत्रिका नेपालकै शहरहरुमा आफ्नो देश मुक्त गराउन पहल गरिरहेका तिब्तिय शरणार्थीहरुले नेपालमा पर्दशन गर्न पाउछन र, बहश गर्दैछन नेपाली जनता। दु:खको कुरा नेपालकै पहिचान भारी भइरहेको देशमा आफ्नो देशको पहिचान खोज्दैछन तिब्बतीहरु।करिब ४९ बर्ष पहिले तिब्बतको पूर्वी भुभाग चाम्डो हडपेर त्यस पछी १७ बुदे सम्झौता गेरर त्यही सम्झौतालाइ पासो बनाउदै सारा तिब्बतलाइ चिनले हडपेको थियो। तिन दिन सम्म चलेको चिनिया र तिब्बतीबिचको लडाइमा २००० तिब्बतिले ज्यान गुमाएका थिए। समर्थन बिरोध सधै हुने नै गर्छन। त्यतीबेला पनि तिब्बतका राष्ट्र प्रमुख दलाइ लामाले अमेरिका,बेलायत,भारत,रुस आदी देशसंग संरक्षणको लागी हार गुहार गरेका थिए। सुनुवाइ कतै भएन,चिलले कुखुराको चल्ला च्यापेर आकाशमा उढे जस्तो सबैले हेरी मात्र रहे। कुखुराको चल्ला चिल्लाए जस्तै चिल्लाउनु बाहेक शान्त तिब्बतीहरुको अरु उपाए केही रहेन। छानी छानी माओका सेनाले सताउदै गए, बाउलाइ बाधेर छोरालाइ बन्दुकले मार्न लगाए। साना साना तिब्बती बालकलाइ परिवार नियोजन गरियो। यातनाको सिमा रहेन। कति जिउदै जलाइए, कति म्रत्यु र जिबनको दोसांधमा सास धान्दै बांचे। जिउदै आफ्नो अगाडी म्रत्यु नाचेको देख्नु भन्दा पहाड काटेर दक्षीण झर्नु स्रेयसक्कर ठाने। दक्षीणको यात्रा त्यती सजिलो थिएन, हिम पहाड काट्दा ज्यान नै जोखीमा हुन्थयो तर जिउदै मारिनु भन्दा पहाडमै मर्न रोजे र नेपाल तथा भारतमा शरणार्थी बन्न पुगे। कैयौं दिनको उकालो र ओरालो, हिउ बग्ने खोला र खानेकुराको अभाव, धेरै बुढा बुढिले हिम पहाडमै अन्तिम आराम गर्ने ठाउ बनाए। आफ्नै प्रियजन अनकन्टार पहाडमा संसार छोड्दा मरेका लाशलाइ ढुगांले थिचेर छोडेर जान्थे आफ्न्तहरु। केहि समय यता उता भएको चिनिया सेनाको गोलीको शिकार बन्नुपर्थ्यो।सिमा सुरक्षा निकै कडा थियो। दलाइ लामाले तिब्बत छोड्दा त हेलीकप्टर लगाएरै खोजी गरिएको थियो। उनको हत्या गर्न पोतला दरबारमा नै आगो लगाइको थियो र भोली पल्ट चीनिया सेना जलेका मान्छेलाइ उत्तानो पार्दै दलाइलामा हुन कि होइनन जाच्दै हिडेका थिए। तिब्बत छोडेर नेपाल पस्दा देउरालीमा उनिहरुले कपडा बाधेर जान्थे जस्को अर्थ हुन्छ "Free Tibet"। म्रित्युसंगै जुधेर देश पार गर्दा पनि अन्तिममा देशलाइ मुक्त गर भन्न कहिलै भुलेनन तिब्बतीहरुले।
अहिले चिन विश्वमा ठुलै हैसियत राख्ने मुलुक भएको छ। तर चिन जबरजस्ति हडपेको तिब्बतलाइ आफ्नै हिस्सा ठान्छ भने सारा विश्व चिनकै मौन समर्थन गरिरहेको छ। इसं १९४९ मा तिब्बत छुट्टै देश भनेर अनुमोदन गरेको छिमेकी राष्ट्र नेपाल पनि चिनिया आर्थिक सहयोगको प्रोभोलनमा तिब्बत समस्या चिनको आन्तरीक मामला भनेर पन्छिने गरेको छ। तर फेरी तिब्बतीहरु तिब्बत गुमेको ४९ बार्षिकीमा जुरमुराएका छन तिब्बत खोज्न। खुला देशको रुपमा चिनीन २९औं ओलम्पिक आयोजना गर्नेलागेको चिनलाइ यस पटक भने तिब्बती आन्दोलनले सारै अप्ठ्यारोमा पारेको छ। जतीसुकै शक्तीसाली देश होस, त्यो भन्दा शक्तीसाली जनता हुन्छन। आफ्नो शक्ति खेर जान नदिइ सहि प्रयोग गर्दै गएमा एक दिन तिब्बत पक्कै पनि चिनबाट मुक्त हुनेछ।



 

Last edited: 16-Mar-08 12:30 PM

 
Posted on 03-16-08 12:23 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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२ चैत्र २०६४ | १५:२९ मा पोष्ट गरिएको
चिनियाँ सरकारको दबाबमा नेपाल सरकारले बैशाख १९ देखि २९ सम्म दक्षिणतर्फबाट सगरमाथा आरोहण अनुमति नदिने निर्णय गरेको छ । सरकारले यो निर्णय गरेको पुष्टि गर्दै पर्यटन तथा नागरिक उड्डयन मन्त्री पृथ्वीसुब्बा गुरुङले चैत १ गते भने, 'बैशाख १९ देखि २९ गतेसम्म सगरमाथा आरोहण अनुमति दिइने छैन ।'

त्यसबेलाका लागि उत्तरतर्फबाट सगरमाथा आरोहण अनुमति रोकिसकेको चिन सरकारका कुटनीतिक अधिकारीहरुले नेपाललाई पनि आरोहण अनुमति नदिन यो हप्ता निकै दबाब दिएका थिए ।

ओलम्पिक र्टच सगरमाथा पुर्‍याउने चिनियाँ सरकारको योजनामा स्वतन्त्र तिब्बतपक्षधर तिब्बती शरणार्थीले अवरोध पुर्‍याउने आशंकामा चिन सरकारले आफ्नोतर्फबाट आरोहण अनुमति नदिएको हो भने नेपाललाई पनि आरोहण अनुमति नदिन दबाब दिएको हो ।

स्वतन्त्र तिब्बत अभियान संचालन गरिरहेका तिब्बती शरणार्थीहरुलाई चैत १ गते तिब्बतमा चिनियाँ प्रहरीले तथा राजधानीको बौद्धमा नेपाल प्रहरीले दमन गरेको बिरोधमा चैत २ गते संयुक्त राष्ट्र संघको कार्यलय पुल्चोकमा तिब्बती शरणार्थीहरुले बिरोध प्रदर्शन गरे । प्रदर्शनमा प्रहरीले हस्तक्षेप गरेको छ ।

सूचना: यो समाचार/ लेख/ अन्तर्वार्ता प्रशारण वा प्रकाशन गर्दा हिमालखबर डट कमलाई उदृत गर्न अनुरोध छ ।
 
Posted on 03-16-08 12:28 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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I hope this heat will help Tibetans to get their land return.

NEW DELHI: From Athens to the Everest, China is feeling the heat of the "Free Tibet" campaign just five months before the biggest show on earth- the 2008 Olympics - opens in Beijing in August.

Even as the first batch of 100 Tibetan activists leading the "Return march to Tibet" are cooling their heels in police detention at a government guest house in Dharamsala, all roads seem to be leading to the seat of the Dalai Lama's government-in-exile in Himachal Pradesh as at least two high-profile American visitors - House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Hollywood star Richard Gere - are expected to show up in the town to express solidarity with the Tibetan activists who are trying to turn their protest into global movement against China's "occupation of Tibet".

On Saturday, despite the barricades on roads to Delhi, a group of 44 Tibetans left Dehra, some 54 kms from Dharamsala, to carry on their march to Tibet. Though they issued strong statements claiming that they were "determined to see this march through to the end", one of the core organizers admitted in private that they knew there was no way they could cross the international border.

"The whole idea of the march is to attract the world's attention to the Tibetan issue. It's not possible for a big group to march into Tibet just like that. We don't want to embarrass the Indian government by doing something reckless, but we certainly want to embarrass the Chinese by protesting wherever and whenever we can. That's our strategy," says one of the organizers of the march.

And if the global media attention is an indication then the strategy seems to be working well, with the world leaders and human rights group asking China not to use force in dealing with "peaceful Tibetan demonstrators in Tibet".

And the protestors' got a major boost on Friday when Pelosi strongly condemned the Chinese action in Lhasa.

"The violent response by Chinese police forces to peaceful protesters in Tibet is disgraceful. The Chinese government should immediately provide information on the welfare and whereabouts of the detained Buddhist monks and facilitate access by international human rights monitors and journalists to Tibetan areas," Pelosi said in a statement in Washington on Friday.

The Democratic Party leader arrives in Dharamsala on Friday. Pelosi is expected to meet the Dalai Lama, Tibetan refugees and human rights activists. "We are expecting her to issue a really strong statement," says a Tibetan official, speaking on the condition of anonymity. "It will put real pressure on China."

And just one day after Pelosi's trip to Dharamsala, Gere will arrive in the town for a meeting with the Dalai Lama. The Hollywood star, who said on Friday that China "should suffer a boycott of the Beijing Olympics if it mishandles protests in Tibet", is likely to repeat his "boycott call" in Dharamsala.

Excited over the next weekend's visits, the Tibetan activists are working overtime to make sure that they use China’s Olympic hype to get maximum mileage for their cause. "We have planned marches, rallies, speeches around the world. We are even organizing Tibetan version of the Olympics in Dharamsala. We will chase the Olympics torch and protest wherever it goes. As China plans to use the games to showcase itself as the world's new superpower, we will expose its ugly record in Tibet," says a Tibetan activist.

With its reputation at stake, the Chinese are not taking the threat lightly. On Saturday, agreeing to China's request, Nepal blocked access to Mt Everest to prevent Tibetans from staging a protest at the peak.

But, with the Tibetans ready to take their protest around the world till the games open in August, the Chinese may continue to feel the heat of Tibetans’ anger for the next few months.

 
Posted on 03-16-08 2:54 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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Now this is what I was expecting in this revolt.

Guts of Tibetans to stand up in their own land to fight for their freedom. This is really heroic of 'em.

On the other hand, it's cowardice of the Chinese gov. to suppress the movement of their own ppl.

Here, we can compare the situation tibetans r facing to the one that we were facing during the gyane's regime.


 
Posted on 03-16-08 8:12 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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It seems Tibetan problem is getting worse. Tibetan must be smart or someone gave the idea, they found the right time

to present their issue.

Here is one form AP:

By CARA ANNA and TINI TRAN, Associated Press Writers 34 minutes ago

TONGREN, China - Protests spread from Tibet into three neighboring provinces Sunday as Tibetans defied a Chinese government crackdown, while the Dalai Lama decried what he called the "cultural genocide" taking place in his homeland.

Demonstrations widened to Tibetan communities in Sichuan, Qinghai and Gansu provinces, forcing authorities to mobilize security forces across a broad expanse of western China.

In Tongren, riot police sent to prevent protests set off tensions when they took up positions outside a monastery. Dozens of monks, defying a directive not to gather in groups, marched to a hill where they set off fireworks and burned incense in what one monk said was a protest, according to an Associated Press reporter at the scene.

In a sign that authorities were preparing for trouble, AP and other foreign journalists were ordered out of the Tibetan parts of Gansu and Qinghai provinces by police who told them it was for their "safety."

Meanwhile, police in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, searched buildings as a Monday deadline loomed for people who took part in a violent anti-Chinese uprising last week to surrender or face severe punishment.

Speaking from India, the Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibetans, called for an international investigation into China's crackdown on demonstrators in Lhasa, which his exiled government claims left 80 people dead. China's state media has said 10 civilians were killed.

"Whether intentionally or unintentionally, some kind of cultural genocide is taking place," the Dalai Lama said, referring to an influx of Chinese migration into Tibetan areas and restrictions on Buddhist practices — policies that have generated deep resentment among Tibetans.

Tensions also boiled over outside the county seat of Aba in Sichuan province when armed police tried to stop Tibetan monks from protesting, according to a witness who refused to give his name.

The witness said a policeman had been killed and three or four police vans had been set on fire. Eight bodies were brought to a nearby monastery while others reported that up to 30 protesters had been shot, according to activist groups the Tibetan Center for Human Rights and Democracy and the London-based Free Tibet Campaign. The claims could not be confirmed.

Sunday's demonstrations follow nearly a week of protests in Lhasa that escalated into violence Friday, with Tibetans attacking Chinese and torching their shops, in the longest and fiercest challenge to Chinese rule in nearly two decades.

Complicating Beijing's task, the spreading protests fall two weeks before China's celebrations for the Beijing Olympics kick off with the start of the torch relay, which will pass through Tibet.

Though many were small in scale, the widening Tibetan protests are forcing Beijing to pursue suppression while on the run, from town to town and province to province across its vast western region. Sunday's lockdown in Tongren required police imported from other towns, the locals said.

The Chinese government attempted to control what the public saw and heard about protests that erupted Friday. Access to YouTube.com, usually readily available in China, was blocked after videos appeared on the site Saturday showing foreign news reports about the Lhasa demonstrations, montages of photos, and scenes from Tibet-related protests abroad.

Television news reports by CNN and the BBC were periodically cut during the day, and the screens went black during a live speech by the Dalai Lama carried on the networks.

China's communist government had hoped Beijing's hosting of the Aug. 8-24 Olympics would boost its popularity at home as well as its image abroad. Instead the event already has attracted the scrutiny of China's human rights record.

Thubten Samphel, a spokesman for the Dalai Lama's government, said multiple people inside Tibet had counted at least 80 corpses since the violence broke out Friday. He did not know how many of the bodies were protesters. The figures could not be independently verified because China restricts foreign media access to Tibet.

In Lhasa, hundreds of armed police and soldiers patrolled the streets on Sunday. Hong Kong Cable TV reported some 200 military vehicles, carrying 40 to 60 armed soldiers each, drove into the city center.

Footage showed the streets were mostly empty other than the security forces. Messages on loudspeakers warned residents to "discern between enemies and friends, maintain order" and "have a clear stand to oppose violence, maintain stability."

James Miles, a BBC correspondent in Lhasa, said troops carrying automatic rifles were "letting off the occasional shot." He said people were scared to come out of their homes for fear of being hit by a bullet.

Westerners who were told to leave Lhasa and arrived by plane in the city of Chengdu said they heard gunshots and explosions throughout Saturday and overnight.

"The worst day was yesterday. It was completely chaotic. There was running and screaming in the street," said Gerald Scott Flint, director of the medical aid group Volunteer Medics Worldwide, who had been in Lhasa four days. Flint said he could see fires burning six or more blocks away.

Tashi Wangdi, president of the Office of Tibet that represents the Dalai Lama in New York, called the departure of tourists worrisome.

"I think there will be total blackout of information to the outside world," he said. "Our worry is they will be more brutal and will use more force now."

The unrest in Tibet began March 10 on the anniversary of a 1959 uprising against Chinese rule of the region. Tibet was effectively independent for decades before communist troops entered in 1950.

The Tibetan communities living far outside what China calls modern Tibet are parts of former provinces of past Tibetan kingdoms, and many inhabitants still revere the Dalai Lama.

"We want freedom. We want the Dalai Lama to come back to this land," said a monk from Rongwo in Tongren. The monks display his pictures, though they have been ordered to remove them.

Inspired by the protests in Lhasa, monks and Tibetans in the town of Xiahe in Gansu province staged two days of protests, one peaceful in which they raised Tibetan national flags, the other in which government offices were smashed and police tear-gassed the crowd of more than 1,000.

Authorities clamped a curfew on Xiahe overnight. Patrols of riot police, in black uniforms, helmets and flak jackets, and armed police in green uniforms carrying batons marched through the town Sunday in groups of 10 and 20.

Smaller protests were reported in two other nearby towns, witnesses said, in both cases drawing truckloads of armed police.

In the Gansu provincial capital of Lanzhou, more than 100 Tibetan students staged a sit-down protest on a playing field at Northwest Minorities University, according to the activist group Free Tibet.

___

Tini Tran reported from Beijing. Associated Press writers David Wivell in Xiahe and Carley Petesch in New York contributed to this report.

___


 
Posted on 03-18-08 9:01 PM     Reply [Subscribe]
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From
March 18, 2008

1,000 Tibetans arrested in Chinese crackdown

Close to 1,000 Tibetans have been detained in two days of sweeps across Lhasa, the capital, by paramilitary police hunting down those who took part in last week’s deadly anti-Chinese riots.

Sources in the city said 600 people had been detained on Saturday and another 300 had been picked up on Sunday. They said it was not clear where those rounded up were being detained because the main Drapchi prison in Lhasa is believed to be virtually full.

Those detained could be taken to the old Number One prison in the Sangyip district in the northeast of Lhasa that is not currently believed to be in use. They may be held in the nearby Number Four detention centre and the New Lhasa prison in the same district that has recently been used as a re-education-through-labour centre. They could even be taken to the new Chushur prison some distance outside Lhasa where most political prisoners are believed to be jailed after sentencing.

Chinese officials were not available to confirm the total number of arrests.

With the expiry at midnight yesterday of a deadline for the Tibetan protesters who on Friday stabbed and hacked ethnic Han Chinese, hurled rocks and set fire to offices, shops and schools, the search for those involved has gathered momentum.

In one residential area of Lhasa near the Potala Palace, a group of police and paramilitary officers raided one apartment block late in the afternoon, drawing a huge crowd of onlookers. They dragged a man of about 50 out of the building along with two young men. All appeared to be city residents and not peasants or nomads from Tibet's vast grasslands.

The paramilitary officers then fired three rounds of tear gas to disperse the crowd that had swollen rapidly during the operation, witnesses said. Murmurs of anger had begun to reverberate among the passersby as police beat the older man, believed to be an ethnic Tibetan Government cadre, as they dragged him from the building and into a waiting security vehicle.

In the Karma Lunsang district, a warren of old Tibetan homes in the east of the city that the authorities suspect has served as an important hideout for the protesters, police and paramilitary were going house to house to check identity papers. One witness said: “Many people have been taken away, but we don’t know how many.”

The sources said it was not known how many people might have surrendered in return for promises of leniency before the midnight deadline or how many had been arrested since Monday.

Police and troops were manning checkpoints across the city, checking all identity papers and it was still quite difficult for people to move easily through the streets.

Foreign journalists travelling in areas near Tibet have reported movements of troops in the direction of the Himalayan region. Sources said garrisons of the People’s Liberation Army around Lhasa have been placed on a grade one alert in case of more trouble.

Chinese authorities have blamed Tibetan mobs manipulated by the exiled Dalai Lama for the deaths of 13 people in the riots on Friday. Tibetan exile groups have said that as many as 100 people may have been killed as troops backed by armoured personnel carriers moved into the city to quash the biggest protests against Chinese rule in 19 years.

Wen Jiabao, the Chinese Premier, in his first remarks on the unrest, accused the rioters of trying to disrupt the Olympic Games that start in Beijing on August 8. “They wanted to incite the sabotage of the Olympic Games in order to achieve their unspeakable goal."

Although Lhasa was quiet, the unrest has spread to nearby provinces with large Tibetan populations. In northwestern Gansu, which borders Tibet, large numbers of ethnic Tibetans took to the streets late on Sunday, burning shops and business belonging to ethnic Han Chinese and Hui Muslims and burning 16 cars, said one witness.

From Monday night all government offices had been ordered to remain on duty around the clock. A local government order said: “Without a notice, no one may leave their posts.”

In neighbouring Sichuan province, an ethnic Tibetan told Reuters he knew of no fresh outbreaks of unrest since Monday. “Now they are bringing back stability. There are so many police and People's Armed Police it will be difficult for anything to spread. I'm sure the People's Liberation Army is waiting, too. In the background waiting, if the situation really gets out of hand."


 


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