Protesters gather around burning debris in the streets of Lhasa, Tibet, Friday March 14, 2008. Protests led by Buddhist monks against Chinese rule in Tibet turned violent Friday, with shops and vehicles torched and gunshots echoing through the streets of the ancient capital, Lhasa. (AP Photo)

Exile Group Says 30 Killed in Tibet

AUDRA ANG | March 15, 2008 02:41 PM EST | AP

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BEIJING — China ordered tourists out of Tibet's capital Saturday while troops on foot and in armored vehicles patrolled the streets and enforced a strict curfew, a day after riots that a Tibetan exile group said left at least 30 protesters dead.

The protests against Chinese rule of Tibet that began Monday are the largest and most violent in the region in nearly two decades. They have spread to other areas of China as well as neighboring Nepal and India among other countries.

China's governor in Tibet vowed to punish the rioters, while law enforcement authorities urged protesters to turn themselves in by Tuesday or face unspecified punishment.

The unrest began on the anniversary of a 1959 uprising against Chinese rule of Tibet. Over the centuries, Tibet was at times part of China's dynastic empires. Communist forces invaded the region in 1950 to reclaim the Himalayan region and seize the commanding heights overlooking rival India.

The protests began with 300 monks demanding the release of other monks detained last fall. But political demands soon came to the fore.

Violence erupted Friday after police tried to stop monks from protesting in central Lhasa and ordinary Tibetans vented pent-up anger on Chinese, hurling stones and torching shops and cars. Witnesses said they heard gunshots on Friday and more shooting on Saturday night.

The violence comes just two weeks before China's Olympic celebrations kick off with the start of the torch relay, which passes through Tibet. China is gambling that its crackdown will not bring an international outcry over human rights violations that could lead to boycotts of the Olympics.

Beijing's hosting of the Olympics in August has already brought scrutiny of China's human rights record and its pollution problems. But so far, the international community has reacted to the crackdown in Tibet only by calling for Chinese restraint without any threats of an Olympic boycott or other sanctions.

"We believe that the boycott doesn't solve anything," International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge told reporters Saturday on the Caribbean island of St. Kitts. "On the contrary. It is penalizing innocent athletes and it is stopping the organization from something that definitely is worthwhile organizing."

Streets in Lhasa were mostly empty Saturday as a curfew remained in place, witnesses said.

Tourists reached by phone or those who arrived Saturday in Nepal described soldiers standing in lines sealing off streets where there was rioting Friday. Armored vehicles and trucks ferrying soldiers were seen on the streets.

"There are military blockades blocking off whole portions of the city, and the entire city is basically closed down," said a 23-year-old Western student who arrived in Lhasa on Saturday. "All the restaurants are closed, all the hotels are closed."

One foreigner in Lhasa said Chinese troops armed with automatic rifles had set up positions in the old city after clearing it of people and were firing at anything that moved.

Plooij Frans, a Dutch tourist who left the capital Saturday morning by plane and arrived in the Nepali capital of Katmandu, said he saw about 140 trucks of soldiers drive into the city within 24 hours.

"They came down on Tibetan people really hard," said Frans, who said his group could not return to their hotel Friday and had to stay near the airport. "Every corner there were tanks. It would have been impossible to hold any protest today."

Government workers in Lhasa said Chinese authorities have been prevented from leaving their buildings.

"We've been here since yesterday. No one has been allowed to leave or come in," said a woman who works for Lhasa's Work Safety Bureau, located near the Potala Palace, the former residence of the Dalai Lama. "Armored vehicles have been driving past," she said. "Men wearing camouflage uniforms and holding batons are patrolling the streets.

Tourists were told to stay in their hotels and make plans to leave, but government staff were required to work.

Some shops were closed, said a woman who answered the telephone at the Lhasa Hotel.

"There's no conflict today. The streets look pretty quiet," said the woman who refused to give her name for fear of retribution.

Xinhua reported Saturday that Lhasa was calm, with little traffic on the roads.

"Burned cars, motorcycles and bicycles remained scattered on the main streets, and the air is tinged with smoke," the report said.

China's official Xinhua News Agency reported at least 10 were killed Friday when demonstrators rampaged in Lhasa, setting fire to shops and cars.

"The victims are all innocent civilians, and they have been burnt to death," Xinhua quoted an official with the regional government as saying.

Twelve police were also injured, Xinhua reported.

The Dalai Lama's exiled Tibetan government in India said it had confirmed Chinese authorities killed at least 30 Tibetan protesters but added the toll could be as high as 100. There was no confirmation of the death toll from Chinese officials and the numbers could not be independently verified.

China maintains rigid control over Tibet, foreigners need special travel permits to get there and journalists rarely get access except under highly controlled circumstances.

In the western province of Gansu, police fired tear gas Saturday to disperse Buddhist monks and others staging a second day of protests in sympathy with anti-Chinese demonstrations in Lhasa, local residents said.

In the western Chinese province of Gansu, several hundred monks marched out of historic Labrang monastery and into the town of Xiahe in the morning, gathering hundreds of other Tibetans with them as they went, residents said.

The crowd attacked government buildings, smashing windows in the county police headquarters, before police fired tear gas to put an end to the protest, residents said. A London-based Tibetan activist group, Free Tibet Campaign, said 20 people were arrested, citing unidentified sources in Xiahe.

"Many windows in shops and houses were smashed," said an employee at a hotel, who did not want either his or the hotel's name used for fear of retaliation. He said he did not see any Tibetans arrested or injured but said some police were hurt.

China's governor in Tibet threatened to punish rioters.

"We will deal harshly with these criminals in accordance with the law," Champa Phuntsok, chairman of the Tibetan government, told reporters in Beijing. "Beating, smashing, looting and burning _ we absolutely condemn this sort of behavior. This plot is doomed to failure."

He blamed the protests on followers of the Dalai Lama, who fled into exile in 1959 after a failed uprising against Chinese rule and is still Tibet's widely revered spiritual leader.

On Friday, the Dalai Lama appealed to China from his home in exile in Dharamsala, India not to use force and to respect Tibetan aspirations.

Pockets of dissent were also springing up outside China.

In Zurich, Switzerland, police said they fired tear gas at pro-Tibet demonstrators who tried to storm the Chinese consulate. Hundreds of people took part in the protest against the Chinese crackdown. Swiss police said they fired the tear gas when several protesters attempted to break into the consulate.

Tibetan groups want the Swiss government to press China on its human rights record.

In Australia, media reported that police used batons and pepper spray to quell a demonstration outside the Chinese consulate in Sydney. The Australian Associated Press reported that dozens of demonstrators were at the scene and five were arrested.

Dozens of protesters in India launched a new march just days after more than 100 Tibetan exiles were arrested by authorities during a similar rally.

And in Katmandu, police broke up a protest by Tibetans and arrested 20.

___

Associated Press writers Anita Chang in Beijing, Ashwini Bhatia in Dehra, India, and Binaj Gurubacharya in Katmandu, Nepal, contributed to this story.

___

On the Net:

International Campaign for Tibet: http://www.savetibet.org

Chinese official news agency: http://www.xinhuanet.com


 
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To horseface and quintus,
Have you ever been to China?Have you ever been a friend to a native Chinese people?Have you been a tourist to Tibet?I' m sure that if you 've done any one above, you will not stand here and yell that China is demon and the boycot thing !Where did you get all your image about China?Don't you know your medium has an alternative choice about what to publish?!
I am, as a Chinese student ,very sorry ,very ashamed about what happened in Tibet !I just hope the fight can stop ,nobody gets hurt.
And If you ask anyone on the street in China,nobody hates Tibet or the people ! We love Them ! We share a strong awe toward Tibetan culture.Many young people have the same dream that one day we can go to Tibet ,to watch the amazing scenery,to kneel down before the the Potala Palace and pray !How can you say we are ruining the culture and environment !You must have heard a lot about the 'damage' news ,but that's not what we want !That's part of development! Haven't you America expirenced all these ?If you say that was history,well ,this will also be history !
I have to admit that many of our officials don't work for the people faithfully.But you must admit that new generations are growing up in China !They are open minded ,humanistic and skillful !You must believe that China has no ambition to occupy the planet or enslave the other nations !And You must believe in the power of the Chinese People,once they wake up ,they are able to create a new ,peaceful world!
And also ,there are millions of volunteers who have been trained to serve,many taxi drivers and Beijing people are learning Enlish in order to have an interesting talk with you people ! But you are here to appeal to disappoint them for political excuse!Should you take religion or cultural events politically!Do you think you are doing a good thing?in a revenge way?
You know that China and Chinese people will never let Tibet separate ,so you encourage Tibetan people to continue fighting ,splashing their blood,is that your HUMANISM ?You have nothing related to the people,but we have !If ,according to your opinion,the Tibetan people have to fight for freedom for another dacade or even more,why don't we just wait ,wait till the new generations who can figure out best ways to solve all these problems in a way all people are satisfied with to get in charge of the large country? That won't be far away ,because the various ideologies have been afouling for MORE THAN 20 years !
Take my advice ,just come to China,to have a look at the people and sniff the air in Beijing ,that will be much more real than the publication! And don't you be afraid ,nobody will burt you ,because racialism is not fashionable in China ,ever and never !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 PM on 03/19/2008
- horseface I'm a Fan of horseface 5 fans permalink

Go to www.olympics.org. It's all about the DOLLARS. The Olympic Committee is pushing China like it's the Shining Golden State of the future. Every American should boycott the Olympics: No TV, No pins, T-shirts, no Olympic crap! No Donations!!!!! The Olympics is so tainted by rigged judging, performance enhancing drugs, bribes and commercialism that it's no loss to sport to ignore it. Write to all the big corporate sponsors that you are boycotting their products AND..... Boycott goods made in China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 03/16/2008
- Kalima I'm a Fan of Kalima 74 fans permalink
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I have just received a Breaking News email from the BBC, saying that a spokesman for the Dalai Lama,
puts the death toll at about 80 people. No link yet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:32 AM on 03/16/2008

the Italian and other foreign media is reporting over 100 deaths, the much lower deaths toll reported in the US, can attributed by the fact that the US media is owned by the same multinational corporations that operate in China, and flood the US with cheap and unreliable products.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:37 AM on 03/16/2008
- Amalek I'm a Fan of Amalek 139 fans permalink
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China is really between a rock and a hard place on this one.

The Tibetans are rioting in the streets. Looting and fighting - that is so un-Buddhist.

The Chinese can't just let that go - you need to keep order, but do so and everyone says you are the butchers from Beijing. What they seem to be doing is trying to stop the violence with the minimum of force - but how do you stop someone from lighting themselves on fire?

The Chinese are not going to let Tibet be an independent country - anymore than America would let Texas declare independence (remember we fought a major war over some states deciding they wanted to go it alone.). Most Chinese will not even go to Tibet - the place is at 14,000 feet and half the people who visit get altitude sickness. But it is so fricking big (and unpopulated) that it would make a huge dent in the map. That, as much as anything, drives Chinese sentiment.

What China wants is for Tibet to quietly do its own thing. Agree to let China run the international affairs and the Tibetans can handle their own religous affairs. But the Buddhists are distinctly unBuddhist in this regard, behaving like the religious right in America. They are mixing politics and religion, and when you do that you get politics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 PM on 03/15/2008
- quintus I'm a Fan of quintus 13 fans permalink

Another Chinese lackey! Are you close friends with Jonahson? The Chinese power elite, like the Burmese junta, care nothing for those they've been oppressing all these many years. For them, human life is worth nothing and they will act with extreme aggression to quell the insurgency. The only thing they care about is their reputation in the world. We are seeing the TRUE FACE of the Chinese power elite; this is what the Tibetans have been suffering under for decades.

China is actively engaged in cultural genocide. They are paying the Han Chinese to move to relocate to Tibet with the eventual aim that they become the majority there. Yes, their aim is to make the Tibetans a minority in their own country. While at the same time they rape the land of all it's natural resources. China is not a great power. It's a shameful nation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:28 PM on 03/15/2008
- Jonahson I'm a Fan of Jonahson 6 fans permalink

Quintus, I am nobody's lacky. My appeal to Dalai Lama is about him being their Buddhist spiriual leader. In Buddhist teachings there is non violence. You know very well China will not give up Tibet and if Tibetans choose violent confrontation, how many lives will die needlessly. While it makes them matyr it is not the way of the Buddha. Sorry to lecture you but my message is meant for Dalai Lama and I thank the Huffington Post for posting it although it may be in vain.
I am not proud of US though, all the unstopple killings in Iraq and meddling in other countries shows that they do not respect the human rights of people living in the rest of the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 AM on 03/16/2008

quintus,

I would just add, the Chinese government is not "only" concerned about their image, in fact, I would say they are, for the most part, simply and primarily interested in stability (false stability, as it were) at home. They do not care as much as most think about what others think. China is a very "internal" country and the primary objective is to be strong and maintain, among the Chinese people, that China is great and almost always right. And that, effectively, is the perception among Chinese in China. Have you ever noticed how defensive so many Chinese people are if they are criticized AT ALL? In the west (where I think many things are shameful), at least the concept of self criticism/reflection has been cultivated to some degree, depending. A Chinese person recently told me, that in China, there is no respect or positive influence to be found in "self criticism". If you have a military/economic power with the percentage of the world population that China has, and they are blindly patriotic and have always been fed "state media", combined with intense pride, you may not feel what anyone else thinks matters. That is, to a larger degree than most can imagine, the 'vibe' in China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:46 AM on 03/16/2008
- Rule Of Law I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law 171 fans permalink

Why don't you quietly do your own thing and...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 AM on 03/16/2008
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Good Post. You are correct. People only picture quiet thoughtful monks from TV. Peaceful and insightful teachers of wisdom. But there is a darker side.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 AM on 03/16/2008
- Rule Of Law I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law 171 fans permalink

Oh hell no Amalek, it would be more like if amish Pennsylvania was invaded by Federal Troops and told that they could no longer practice their religion or govern themselves. Nothing like invading a country that abhors violence and then being upset when they actually assert themselves. Did they kill anyone---NO! But even a rat in a corner will fight back! Get used to it--it is going to be the way of things in the future as we are all rats now!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 AM on 03/16/2008

Amalek,

I would say, as someone else said, the Tibetans have been extremely patient and peaceful (VERY Buddhist), while witnessing and enduring the destruction of their homeland and culture, as well as attempts to destroy Tibetan Buddhism itself, for fifty years. Eyewitness reports say that these riots started BECAUSE police/army began beating monks who were protesting peacefully. The government says the army fired no shots (yeah, right), yet there are firsthand reports of automatic weapons fire and tank fire. So, do the poor Tibetans now have Uzi's and tanks?

In terms of your statement; "What China wants is for Tibet to quietly do its own thing. Agree to let China run the international affairs and the Tibetans can handle their own religous affairs." Since when does "re-educating" young monks and lamas, editing Buddhist teachings, and "requiring" that they "denounce the Dalai Lama", amount to letting "Tibetans...handle their own religious affairs"? BTW, the Dalai Lama says he only wants "autonomy", not full independence, so what's the problem???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:33 AM on 03/16/2008
- Jonahson I'm a Fan of Jonahson 6 fans permalink

I take advantage of Huffington Post to make a personal appeal to the Dalai Lama that if he is in anyway involved in this uprising, PLEASE STOP IT NOW. The Tibet of now has changed it will never go back to being the Tibet of yesteryears. You are their spiritual Leader , I hope you recognize that your country is going through the stages of 'anicca'. Even Buddhism, practiced in any country is subjected to rise and ebb. If you work against changes you will only bring suffering to your fellow country men. What would Avalokitisravaya do ?

As their Leader it is a disadvantage to you to be born attached with a title. You must lead them by example and not the other way. You must not be taken advantage of by countries which may have their own agenda although they may seem to be helping you. I met a young Buddhist master eleven years ago. He has the ability to see future karma and was preparing to go to US to do Dharmaduta work. Why the US, I asked. He told me a chilling answer. US is a powerful country and they will create alot of suffering to the world. If you help them then you help to reduce suffering.
I hope Hufffington Post will post this message. I also hope the Dalai Lama will get to read this message maybe through one of his followers. My best wishes to the Dalai Lama and the Tibetians.
May you all be well and happy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 PM on 03/15/2008
- quintus I'm a Fan of quintus 13 fans permalink

Wow! Spoken as a true lackey of the Chinese regime in power! It is obvious from your post that you know nothing about Buddhism! You misspell the word annicca and dharmadhatu and clerly do not understand their meanings. Moreover, you know nothing about the Dalai Lama or the true nature of his character. He would not, in any way, be involved in this uprising because he has consistently preached non-violence despite all the atrocities committed against his people. The suffering that the Chinese have visited on the Tibetan people for nearly a half century is negative karma that they will surely reap in the future.

China's power elite are not only responsible for Tibet, but for the ongoing oppression of their own people, not to mention Muslims and Christians. They have their sights set on Taiwan and will surely invade that country when they feel that they can do so without consequence.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 PM on 03/15/2008
- Rule Of Law I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law 171 fans permalink

your poor usage of the English language reveals you for the troll that your are. Do you savvy "Troll?"

Troll and ComSymp--alla same same, savvy now?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 AM on 03/16/2008
- quintus I'm a Fan of quintus 13 fans permalink

Spoken as a true lackey of the Chinese regime in power!

It is obvious from your post that you know nothing about Buddhism! You misspell the word annicca and dharmadhatu and clearly do not understand their meanings. Moreover, you know nothing about the Dalai Lama or the true nature of his character. He would not, in any way, be involved in this uprising because he has consistently preached non-violence despite all the atrocities committed against his people.

The suffering that the Chinese have visited on the Tibetan people for nearly a half century is negative karma that they will surely reap in the future.

China's power elite are not only responsible for Tibet, but for the ongoing oppression of their own people! They also have their sights set on Taiwan and will surely invade that country when they feel that they can do so without consequence.

America has made a big mistake encouraging relations with China. it will come back to bite us some day.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 AM on 03/16/2008
- quintus I'm a Fan of quintus 13 fans permalink

It is obvious from your post that you know nothing about Buddhism! You misspell the word annicca and dharmadhatu and clearly do not understand their meanings. Moreover, you know nothing about the Dalai Lama or the true nature of his character. He would not, in any way, be involved in this uprising because he has consistently preached non-violence despite all the atrocities committed against his people. Moreover, he is a past recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (1989).

The suffering that the Chinese have visited on the Tibetan people for nearly a half century is negative karma that they will surely reap in the future.

China's power elite are not only responsible for Tibet, but for the ongoing oppression of their own people! They also have their sights set on Taiwan and will surely invade that country when they feel that they can do so without consequence.

America has made a big mistake encouraging relations with China. it will come back to bite us some day.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:30 AM on 03/16/2008
- Jonahson I'm a Fan of Jonahson 6 fans permalink

You understand those words even with the spelling wrong. It had served its purpose and thank you for pointing out the mistakes. My sanskrit and pali is a bit rusty after not reading and attending Dharma talks for a long time.
Glad to know you have an interest in Buddhism.
May you be well and happy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 AM on 03/17/2008

Jonahson,

How many of the Dalai Lama's books have you read in entirety, how many of his lectures have you listened to, how many times have you been in his presence personally? How many Rinpoches have you sat with personally and talked at length with regarding the Dalai Lama? How many nights have you slept in Tibetan temples, not in guest quarters, but with lamas and rinpoches?

Your statement that "if" he was involved in this uprising, followed by you 'lecturing' tone, is typically propagandistic and echoes state media, while showing you know nothing of either Tibetan Buddhism or the Dalai Lama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:56 AM on 03/16/2008
- Jonahson I'm a Fan of Jonahson 6 fans permalink

Good at least I get to speak to someone who 'knows' Buddhism. There were no books during the Buddha's time not even 200 years later. The practice of Vajrana Buddhism is the practice of the Ten Perfections. Their Vehicle is compassion. It is the highest practice a Buddhist can achieve that is to become a Fully Enligthened Buddha.
A Rinpoche is not born with the title.They are recognized as a rebirth of a previous Lama.
In the present life, he does not bring along the knowledge of his previous lives and so he need to start learning all over again in a Tibetian Monastry of high learning before attaining to the title of the "Precious One". What he brings along in the present life is the positive accumulative energy of the ten perfections. That is why when he see suffering his compassion arises, when he see monks and monastry he has the affinity to renounce and so forth.
In Tibetan Buddhism, if you take higher ordination from a Guru(spiritual teacher) then you must have full devotion to him as he will guide you to enlightenment . You are right , I have not spoken to many Rinpoche nor have I slept in a Tibetan temple. If you have I hope you are much wiser than before. In Buddhism there are many Sects for different people with different karma. Just like different medicine administered to different people with different sickness.
Try answering this question yourself 'Where is my anger when it does not arise?'
May you be well and happy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 PM on 03/16/2008
- Rule Of Law I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law 171 fans permalink

I noticed on maps in two separate issues of National Geographic that the Nation Of Tibet no longer exists!

In correspondence with them they said:

"Thank you for your letter to the National Geographic Society regarding the portrayal of Tibet in our recent map of the world.

The United States recognizes the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) and Tibetan autonomous prefectures and counties in other provinces to be a part of the People's Republic of China. We follow these designations in our reporting. The fact is that Tibet does not enjoy sovereignty at this time, and we doubt we would be serving the best interests of our readers if we gave them anything other than a realistic picture. This means that we show the world as it is, with current de facto conditions, and therefore include Tibet within the boundaries of China."

Tibet does not enjoy sovereignty at this time. Like a child might "enjoy" a toy?

With institutionalized double talk like this, is it any wonder that Tibet still suffers under the repressive domination of the Red Chinese? Perhaps Natl Geog needs occasional access to China for stories and so must make nice with the genocidal regime. Or perhaps they just don't want to piss off Bush and this regime's most favored nation status and coming Olympic games business deals--especially since China is our Largest Creditor and we wouldn't want them asking for all those loans they've made us to be repaid all at once, would we?

So, while China is certainly a demon on the world stage, we have our own demons right here in America, and, as usual, they aren't often apparent until their economic interests push up against the humanitarian rights of a formerly free and peaceful people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 PM on 03/15/2008
- quintus I'm a Fan of quintus 13 fans permalink

My hope is that this story receives the coverage it so rightly deserves. Why the tragedy of Tibet has all but been forgotten by the world is truly a mystery to me. China's invasion of Tibet back in 1959 resulted in 1 million Tibetan dead and every single monastery (all 10,000) destroyed. Since then, Tibetans have suffered horribly under Chinese rule. Their illegal forced occupation amounts to nothing short of cultural genocide. And yet, the world remains silent.

The Chinese want the world to believe Tibet has always been a part of China but this is a monstrous lie; ethnic Tibetans are in no way related to the Han Chinese. Those who bother to read tan unbiased history of China and Tibet can not possibly say that Tibet has always been a part of China.

The world has an opportunity to finally put pressure on China to do the right thing regarding Tibet. China wants to present itself to the world as a great world power by hosting the Olympics, but they should be held accountable for the ongoing horrific abuses taking place in tibet each and every day.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:41 PM on 03/15/2008
- Rule Of Law I'm a Fan of Rule Of Law 171 fans permalink

This "story?" This story has been going on for almost 60 years! The US Government does not give a rats ass. They want to sell cigarettes to China, Coke and McDonalds! If Bush can murder his own people what makes you think he has a soul at all? And China--china is the place where they murder entire families back to 3 generations to remove the threat of revenge. They may call themselves Communists, but they are about as Communistic as you or I. They are autocratic Dictators with the same goals as Stalin or Kruschev or Putin--Make more money than anyone else, and to hell with the people. They could almost be Republicans!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:13 AM on 03/16/2008
- craneman I'm a Fan of craneman 5 fans permalink

Any and all countries that has any respect for human rights, would just say NO when it comes to participation in the upcoming Olympics. "hell no we won.t go"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:40 PM on 03/15/2008
- quintus I'm a Fan of quintus 13 fans permalink

I completely agree! Why should China be granted the honor of hosting the Olympics when such human rights abuses are being perpetrated by those in power? The world should boycott the upcoming Olympics until China promises to return Tibet to the Tibetans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 PM on 03/15/2008
- twohearts I'm a Fan of twohearts 2 fans permalink

I hate the idea of the US not going to the Olympics, but this is the last straw for me. The Tibetan takeover has never been right! And then we have the horrible oxygen & air in Beijing, the sweeping under the rug (in jail) of lots of dissidents, etc. etc. etc.!!
They do not DESERVE the honor of having these events. So, I agree with quintus & craneman.

Boycott!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 PM on 03/15/2008
- rbe1 I'm a Fan of rbe1 permalink

What needs to be emphasized is that Tibet was not merely not part of China for significant amounts of time, it was in fact during extended periods of time an independent kingdom. The Chinese invasion of 1948-1949 was nothing more than a brutal takeover to gain lebensraum for the Han Chinese.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:01 PM on 03/15/2008
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Nice of Huffington Post to set aside all the space for usually reserved for political whores and lifestyles to mention the trouble in Tibet. As the Chinese inhabit Tibet they absolutely forbid the practice of the traditional culture of the people of Tibet. As the Olympics approach, there is no more glaring example of the brutal denial of human rights by a communist government than the situation In Tibet. The Bush administration has shown that it does not care two cents for human rights unless there is some oil or political prestige involved. Even Huffington Post has ignored these many days of trouble. I guess the death count has to be pretty high to compete with the other incredibly important stories appearing in these pages. The coming Olympics are the best time ever to agitate the Chinese over this issue. They think they can keep everybody quiet but I hope that is not the case. I have many Tibetian friends I have not seen in many years. they are very good people on the whole with a rich culture to which they were devoted. It is a disgrace how the world community ignores this situation...yet all our policy decries our support for freedom and democracy in the world.

My heart goes out to all those people. The only weapon the west has at this moment is information. The Chinese are livid that photos and stories will go out on this. I hope the world press will try to keep the heat on and continue to report on this situation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:35 PM on 03/15/2008
- Zentomato I'm a Fan of Zentomato 9 fans permalink

The long sad story of China's bloody invasion and occupation of Tibet is a true outrage for the whole civilized world. The countless murders, imprisonment and torture of Buddhist monks and nuns by the Chinese occupation forces is a shame that will shadow China for a long time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:20 PM on 03/15/2008
- Blutus I'm a Fan of Blutus 11 fans permalink

Where have all the Comments gone?

Are the Chinese murderers now in control of this site?

Maybe Wal-Mart??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:13 PM on 03/15/2008
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Despite all the negative, anti-America news about China on an almost daily basis, the trade deficit soars. Wal Mart, Home Depot and others prosper and there customers undermine our security with every naive purchase of Chinese goods. Pet food, tooth paste and now pharmaceuticals from China are poisoning and killing Americans and their pets and we hear the FDA only inspects 1 in 1000 importers. We have relinquished our manufacturing base and are now sending much of our service industries off shore in the name of profit. Greed and short sightedness has mortgaged our present to the hilt and is now flushing our future down the drain. HR

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 03/15/2008

So long as we are in Iraq, it seems awfully hypocritical of us to make a big fuss over China's actions in Tibet. Word on the street is that the Tibetans were turning over cars, burning Chinese shops and beating Chinese locals with iron bars.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 PM on 03/15/2008
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