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TIBET IS BURNING

Eleven young Tibetans have set fire to themselves in eastern Tibet since March 2011; nine since 26 September.  At least six have died including two nuns. These unprecedented and truly desperate acts are a cry to the outside world for help.

 

Seven of these self-immolations are linked to Kirti Monastery in Ngaba, one of the largest and most influential monastic institutions in Tibet.

China’s merciless and violent crackdown in Ngaba and throughout Tibet is intensifying Tibetan grievances and exacerbating the resentment and desperation felt across Tibet.

This growing tragedy, if left unchecked, could spiral even further into a nation-wide crisis, unless the world acts now.

 

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HIS HOLINESS THE DALAI LAMA

His Holiness speaks to Chinese students in Rochester, MN

Rochester, Minnesota, USA, 22 April, 2012 - On his arrival in Rochester, several hundred members of the Tibetan community had gathered to welcome him. His Holiness went around greeting them and advised them to remain at ease. His Holiness was received by officials and doctors of Mayo Clinic and thereafter went to address a gathering of more than a 100 Chinese students and scholars studying in in Minnesota.

His Holiness bestows Yamantaka Initiations and talks about peace in troubled times

Long Beach, California, 21 April 2012 - On his last full day in Long Beach during this visit, His Holiness bestowed the Yamantaka Initiations, addressed a group of Chinese & others, and spoke to more than 10,000 people on Peace in Troubled Times. His Holiness left his hotel early in the morning to the Long Beach Arena to finish the preparatory ritual for the Yamantaka Initiations.

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CULTURAL GENOCIDE

Dalai Lama blames Tibetan burning protests on 'cultural genocide'

Dalai Lama in Tokyo

Tibet's exiled spiritual leader says desperate conditions under Chinese rule lie at heart of recent self-immolation

The Dalai Lama in Tokyo this week. At least 11 Tibetans have set themselves ablaze in Sichuan province, China, this year. Photograph: Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP/Getty
The desperate conditions Tibetans face under Beijing's rigid controls are behind the spate of self-immolations in south-west ChinaTibet's exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, has said.

At least 11 Tibetans have set themselves ablaze this year in a heavily Tibetan part of China's Sichuan province that has become a focus of defiance against Beijing rule. "Including many Chinese from mainland China who visit Tibet, they all have the impression things are terrible ... Some kind of culture genocide is taking place," the Dalai Lama told a news conference in Tokyo on Monday.

Chinese officials have conducted a hardline policy against Tibet in the past 10 to 15 years, he added. "That's why, you see, these sorts of sad incidents happen, due to the desperateness of the situation," he said.

In the latest incident, a Tibetan nun burned herself to death last week, while another Tibetan suffered burns to his legs on Friday when he set himself ablaze outside the Chinese embassy in India.

China has said the Dalai Lama, who fled Tibet in 1959 to India after a failed uprising against Chinese rule, should take the blame for the burnings and that Tibetans are free to uphold their Buddhist faith.

China has ruled Tibet with an iron fist since Communist troops arrived in 1950. Beijing condemns the Dalai Lama as a supporter of violent separatism, but the Dalai Lama denies this.

"We are totally committed to the non-violence principle," he said, reiterating his line that he wants true autonomy for Tibet, not independence from China.

The 76-year-old Nobel peace prize laureate led hundreds of monks, nuns and lay Tibetans in prayer in India last month to mourn those who have burned themselves to death.


Tibetan sets himself on fire in Nepal 


KATHMANDU: Tension ran high in Bouddha area today after a Tibetan monk set himself ablaze before his fellow monks and passers-by extinguished the fire.

It coincides with the visit of a 10-member Chinese delegation led by Lt Gen Lang Youliang from Tibet Military Command of Chengdu Military Region

to urge Nepali authorities

to rein in Tibetans living in the county.

DSP Shyam Lal Gyawali, chief of Metropolitan Police Circle, Bouddha, said a Tibetan in his 20s had tried to immolate himself on the premises of Bouddhanath Stupa, a holy Buddhist site at around 7 am when more that 600 Tibetans had gathered for mass prayer to remember monks and nuns, who had immolated themselves in Tibet.

The monk chanted anti-China slogans as he hoisted the Tibetan flag before setting himself on fire as his fellow monks intervened. He fled before police arrived.

“He must have suffered minor burn injury in the right soldier. We think it was a planned bid not to self-immolate, but to earn cheap popularity and pose a threat to security. We are after the monk,” DSP Gyawali said, adding that his identity was not immediately known.

According to police, the monk had reportedly turned up there after pouring kerosene on parts of his upper garment before setting it on fire with a gas lighter.

Meanwhile, police have arrested one suspect for his alleged involvement in the ‘self-immolation drama.

Eleven Tibetans have set themselves ablaze across Tibet in the past six months ‘to protest repressive Chinese rule in their homeland.’ Earlier, police had arrested 18 Free Tibet activists for their alleged bid ‘to self-immolate’ in Sanepa, Lalitpur, on November 1.

Nepal, home to more than 22,000 Tibetan exiles, sticks to ‘One China Policy’ and has vowed not to allow its soil to be used against its neighbours.

Chinese flag trampled and Tibetan national flag hoisted in its place . Nothing is more resilient than human spirit and so long as it is alive ,Freedom is just a matter of time.

Culture genocide in Tibet is true, says former US diplomat

John Graham
DHARAMSHALA, November 15: John Graham, a former US diplomat, after a ten-day private visit to Tibet, last month, has attested that reports of cultural genocide in Tibet are true.

"For ten days last month I saw first-hand what the Chinese are doing in Tibet … The reports you've heard of cultural genocide are true. China is obliterating the ideas, traditions and habits of the Tibetan people," writes Graham in an article titled ‘Goodbye Tibet?

By keeping hand written notes in personal code on food wrappers mixed in with dirty socks, the former US Foreign Service Officer came out with an insightful article unveiling the on going Chinese repressive policies that have forced eleven Tibetans to set ablaze since last March.

"It was not easy to get Tibetans to talk with me, out of sight or hearing-most Tibetans made it clear how much they hated the Chinese for invading their country, but even more for deliberately trying to destroy their culture and their way of life," writes Graham.

The well-known speaker and author of several books notes that Lhasa has been turned into a Potemkin village where all the best-paying jobs are taken by Chinese while Tibetans are forced to pick through what's left.

Remarking on the resilient non-cooperation tactics employed by Tibetans, Graham writes: “Just a few hundred yards from the manicured boulevards of downtown Lhasa you'll find acres of simple Tibetan houses, made of stone and cinderblock. It's a crime not to fly the Chinese flag from your roof, but two-thirds of these little households risk a heavy fine not to do it.”

Drawing attention to the forced resettlement of Tibetan nomads and farmers, Graham notes, “Tibetan houses are being bulldozed one by one, with their residents moved to Cabrini Green-type high-rises as fast as these can be built”.

“Forced moves like this starve not bodies but souls. The idea is to lead Tibetans, especially young Tibetans, to forget who they are,” writes Graham.
 

Chinese man self-immolates in Tiananmen Square

 
A Chinese man named Wang lies down on the ground in front of Mao Zedong's portrait after police put off flames from his body in the Tiananmen Square on October 21, 2011.
DHARAMSHALA, November 18: In what is being seen as the first act of self-immolation in mainland China following the recent wave of self-immolations by Tibetans in Tibet, a Chinese man set himself on fire in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, the scene of the 1989 pro-democracy protests.

The incident happened on October 21 in broad daylight, steps away from the giant portrait of Mao Zedong but Chinese state agencies effectively censored all information over the protest from the media as well as social networking sites and blogs for nearly a month.

Thanks to a photograph taken by a British couple, who were at the Square, and were later published by The Daily Telegraph and BBC, the Chinese man’s sacrifice didn’t get rubbished as another rumour.

The Daily Telegraph reported that after being shown the photograph, the incident was confirmed on Wednesday by the press department of the Beijing Public Security Bureau (PSB) which is responsible for monitoring and maintaining social order in China.

"At around 11 o'clock on Oct. 21, 2011, [a man surnamed] Wang walked to the spot near Jinshui bridge, and suddenly set his clothes on fire. The policemen at the scene extinguished the fire within ten seconds and sent the man to hospital for treatment," the Daily Telegraph quoted a faxed statement from the Bureau.

"He has now pulled through. After investigation, Wang (male, 42, resident of Huanggang city, Hubei province) took the extreme action because of discontent over the outcome of a civil litigation in a local court."

Alan Brown, 59, who had witnessed the self-immolation, told the Daily Telegraph he had been astonished by the speed at which the security forces had stepped in to douse the flames and then erase any trace of the incident.

"There were lots of people taking pictures at the time, so I was surprised not to hear anything about on the news afterwards … After it happened, the street cleaners were working almost straight away. If anyone had arrived five or ten minutes later they would have seen nothing".

Writing in his blog, Peter Foster, the Beijing based Daily Telegraph reporter pointed out that without the photographic evidence, Mr Wang's self-immolation would have been another subversive "rumour" to suppress.

“This is the single biggest problem facing the Chinese state, the one from which all its other difficulties flow: the absence of truth,” Foster wrote.
 
 
 

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