Tibet Protests Spread to Other Provinces

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CARA ANNA and TINI TRAN | March 16, 2008 10:25 PM EST | AP

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Tibetans look at the Chinese riot police standing in formation at a Chinese army compound in Xiahe, Gansu Province, China, Sunday, March 16, 2008. On Saturday, police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of Buddhist monks and other Tibetans after they marched from the historic Labrang monastery and smashed windows in the county police headquarters in Xiahe, witnesses said.(AP Photo/Andy Wong)

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 Qinghai province, riot police sent to prevent protests set off tensions when they took up positions outside a monastery in Tongren. 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.

Tibet's governor Champa Phuntsok said Monday that 13 civilians were killed and dozens were wounded in violence that broke out in Lhasa on Friday. China's state media said earlier that 10 civilians were killed.

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.

"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.

Story continues below

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.

___

On the Net:

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

Chinese official news agency (in English): http://www.chinaview.cn

Tibet Daily: http://www.tibetdaily.com

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 g...
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 g...
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- LeonBNJ I'm a Fan of LeonBNJ 23 fans permalink

Finally, the people are rising up against their oppressors. I hope their protests continue even though it risks 1000's dying. China will not be able to hide their attacks, the truth will come out. This will ruin their presentation of the Summer Olympics as I suspect there will be substantual boycotts.
I do hope that this finally leads to our and the world's politicans to start to deal with the China in the way they should.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 PM on 03/16/2008
- Alethia I'm a Fan of Alethia 3 fans permalink

Yes, the world should pay more attention to human rights in Tibet. But, while we are on the subject of the Himalayas, I wonder why there is zero news coverage of India's brutal supression of human rights in Kashmir: custodial killings, women raped by security forces, government denial of self-determination...
Is it that it is trendy to support a Buddhist cause and uncool to support a Muslim cause?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:07 PM on 03/16/2008
- mrJJ I'm a Fan of mrJJ 23 fans permalink

Nothings going to change... The Olympics will go on as planned & NO Nation US, Euopean or otherwise will publicly critisize China. Even if they did China will rollout the "This is an internal matter for the Chinese people".... butt out. message.
End of story... Too bad the Tibetans abhor violence to the extreme... They never had a chance to begin with.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:13 PM on 03/16/2008
- HumeSkeptic I'm a Fan of HumeSkeptic 1658 fans permalink
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"There are many ways to support Tibetans and the Tibet movement. By joining or donating to ICT, you are standing in solidarity with His Holiness the Dalai Lama, hundreds of Tibetan political prisoners, and the many thousands of individuals working around the world to secure justice, human rights and religious freedom for the Tibetan people."

http://www.savetibet.org/donate/index.php
-------------

Please consider taking action. The brave people of Tibet deserve our respect , admiration and support.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:05 PM on 03/16/2008

Let's see, it not okay for Obama to want to speak with our enemies ... hmm ... but hey, wtf, we'll trade with one of the most oppressive regimes in the world ... we'll have talks with them (McCain, Clinton) meanwhile they attempt to eradicate an entire culture and people ...

wake up people ... you are eating arsenic-laced twinkies from the co-opted MSM and the pols who have every reason to keep us divided ... $$$ ...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:54 PM on 03/16/2008

There is absolutely no chance the U.S. government will do anything more about this than sheepishly ask the Chinese to limit the carnage. Face it, folks, they have tremendous leverage over us. The Chinese government owns a load of our debt (thank George's Excellent Iraq Adventure, among other things, for that). Also, American consumers have become addicted to the all the cheap "stuff" China dumps on our shores every day. If there's one unforgivable Bill Clinton did while president, it was reinstating China's Most-Favored-Nation trade status.

The problem is that while we like to say family, faith and freedom are what we hold most dear, money trumps them all in the end. Every time! Our current relationship with China proves that more than anything else. An authoritarian state that shares none of our founding principles, China is one of the last countries on earth with which we should be doing business. However, our corporations love dealing with a place that offers an endless supply of cheap labor and has no regard for environmental quality. Sure, you're kids might get lead poisoning, but the shareholders are happy, and isn't that the important thing? And who attends campaign fund raising dinners and sets up shop on K Street? These same corporations. Beyond the campaign cash, our elected officials like having consumers think they're always getting a bargain because they will spend more in aggregate. The more they spend, the more taxes are collected and the more space people need in the cars/homes to transport/store all their booty. As for consumers, too many of us equate living well with the accumulation of things we could live just as well, or even better, without.

The bottom line is that as Americans we need to do one of two things: live according to what we like to say we stand for as a nation and demand that our government do the same, or admit to being vapid material whores and accept the consequences with asses raised high. Either way, let's bring rhetoric and actions into alignment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:04 PM on 03/16/2008
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 246 fans permalink
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If the Mujhadin can send the USSR packing, and the NVA can kick the USA's ass then why can't the Tibetans, with a little help from some friends, kick the Chinese out of their country.

Oh, could it be that we WON'T send them aide or weapons because China is our "Most Favored Nation" trading partner. Nahhh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:19 PM on 03/16/2008
- Cautious I'm a Fan of Cautious 15 fans permalink
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I think HHDL was misunderstood. He may have intended to say that there has been cultural genocide going on in Tibet since before he had to go into exile. Monasteries were destroyed, monks and nuns killed and worse. And of course they are attempting to dilute the culture by moving all the Han Chinese in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 03/16/2008

The Dalai Lama and his people must prevail, and we can help in small ways, all of us.

The Olympics are a perfect opportunity for the thousands of tourists who will head to China to protest.

There will be numerous small signs and T-shirts with political messages that will be impossible for the Chinese to keep from finding their way onto TV. It has the makings of a PR disaster for them.

Boycott Wal Mart, and do your best to buy products not made in China. Talk about this will friends and relatives, spread the word.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 03/16/2008
- quintus I'm a Fan of quintus 13 fans permalink

It's a sad fact that this story is not getting any air time on the major news channels. Why?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:25 PM on 03/16/2008

Excellent posts. All three of you, I guess human rights and mass murder is just not important.

Perhaps without starting some monster chain mail, each individual on Huffington Post can undertake to contact everyone on their email list and ask them to boycott all the Olympic sponsors but also contact the aforementioned sponsors and the International Olympic Committee to let them know that you are doing so and why it is being done - I would put the link up - but that is contrary to Huffington Post policy - simply go to the IOC and you will find the information.

Also, this morning the IOC President, stated that he did not feel that anything happening in Tibet was serious enough to effect the Olympics in any way. And, as for the American government, Secretary Rice, stated that she had asked China to exercise restraint, and I am certain the unarmed Monks and civillians that are being butchered by the Chinese military will find compfort in such aggressive humanitarian intervention on their behalf by the greatest democracy in the world. The Dalai Lama has made a direct appeal to the world to stop what he has called an "ethic genocide" being perpetrated by the Chinese government against the people of Tibet. The Chinese army has closed the borders, are forcing all press out and seizing or erasing all data and photos, and finally they are blocking internet communication in certain portals - still the uprising is spreading - and so are the military's abuses.

The Chinese government has absolutely no intention of ever adhering to any human rights, environmental, industrial, economic, intellecual property, or any other recognized legal or ethical principle required by the global community. They are going to be the next superpower both economically as well as militarily, and it is essential that America as the leader of the freeworld stands up for the unarmed, non-violent, and disenfranchised Tibetan people.

Both, President Bush and President Clinton were and are very connected to the Chinese government and so it is unlikely without pressure that they will do anything to stop China, just remember that Nelson Mandela spent most of his life in prison waiting for the world to stop South Africa. The Chinese make the Afrikaners look mild by comparison.

Free Tibet. Boycott the Olympics in China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:22 PM on 03/16/2008
- quintus I'm a Fan of quintus 13 fans permalink

Why has the world ignored what has been happening in Tibet for nearly fifty years? Why has Tibet's story been so hard to get out? Recently, there was talk of boycotting the Olympics because of China's unwillingness to stop the genocide in Darfur, but what about the half century forced occupation of Tibet as an even more compelling reason for boycotting the Olympics? Few people know that 1 million Tibetans lost their lives back in 1959 following China's invasion of Tibet. Few people realize that every single monastery (over 10,000) was destroyed by the Red Army. Few realize that the oppression has continued unabated all these years, with many instances of harsh imprisonment, torture, deaths, etc. It is absolutely true that the Chinese are perpetrating cultural genocide in Tibet. They have denied Tibetans the freedom to worship and many other basic human rights. Currently, there is an ongoing effort in China to resettle Tibet by Han Chinese with the purpose of making Tibetans a minority in their own country. All the while, China continues to plunder Tibet's natural resources and turn Lhasa into a tourist destination not with the intent of helping the local Tibetans but solely for the economic enrichment of the Chinese. It's a story that should be widely disseminated for the purpose of educating the world about the tragedy happening in Tibet and for the purpose of putting pressure on China to do the right thing and return Tibet to the Tibetans.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 03/16/2008
- Blutus I'm a Fan of Blutus 11 fans permalink

Fear of China. Plain and simple.

Fear militarily, fear economically. China.

And if I live 1000 years, I will never understand why the world let this happen to Tibet.

Why we are so afraid of a country that cannot feed its people
is beyond me.

I think your average LA street gang could kick them out of Tibet.
They are a nation of bullies and it is time the world stopped
kowtowing to China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:29 PM on 03/16/2008
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I stopped. I refuse to buy anything that is made in China. So I pay a little more. I have too much stuff anyway. Everybody does. Live simply and buy American or European. Buy the way, "Nature's Promise" organic frozen vegetables are grown in China. They are grown in a place where the air, water and soil are the most polluted on earth. It is in fine print on the package.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:51 PM on 03/16/2008
- quintus I'm a Fan of quintus 13 fans permalink

We are going to seriously regret some day soon the relationship our government has forged with China. This is a regime that, I believe, shows it's true face more in how they've dealt with Tibet (not to mention their own people) than anything else they've managed to accomplish, i.e., economic growth, etc. The US would rather turn a blind eye to what is going on there than deny themselves the cheap (often flawed, poisonous, etc.) goods it gets from China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:30 PM on 03/16/2008
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Military fear?

I don't buy that at all.

It's plainly the economy. They have acquired an instrument that they can strangle us any day, of course, the pay a price, too. But for us it's disastrous. They won't need to fire a single bullet to push us into a corner.

This, Tibet, is a real story that should be up the top of the list but we have 'more' important things to worry.

I just fear we will see (or better : we will not see because everybody else is forced out) another Tiananmen in the next days and go back to business as usual. If they are not able to handle a crisis like that peacefully, they should not run the Olympics.

We will go back to consume and leave our conscience untouched. There's no oil in Tibet, only a few monks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:00 PM on 03/16/2008

The US , Great Britain and Canada should Boycott the China Olympics,

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:54 PM on 03/16/2008
- sculptor I'm a Fan of sculptor 8 fans permalink

God I hate the posting software here.....

Coca-Cola

Atos Origin

General Electric

Johnson & Johnson

Eastman Kodak Company

Lenovo Group Limited

Manulife

McDonald’s

Panasonic

Samsung

Swatch

Visa

Air China

Bank of China

China Mobile

China Netcom

Sinopec

CNPC/PetroChina

Volkswagen

Adidas

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:51 PM on 03/16/2008
- sculptor I'm a Fan of sculptor 8 fans permalink

I'm going to permanently and totally boycott the sponsors of this Olympics.

Coca-Cola
Atos Origin
General Electric
Johnson & Johnson
Eastman Kodak Company
Lenovo Group Limited
Manulife
McDonald’s
Panasonic
Samsung
Swatch
Visa
Air China
Bank of China
China Mobile
China Netcom
Sinopec
CNPC/PetroChina
Volkswagen
Adidas

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 03/16/2008
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