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Tibet: Tensions High As Uprising Anniversary Approaches

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ANITA CHANG and DIKKY SINN | March 6, 2009 01:39 PM EST | AP

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Tibetans in exile look on after a meeting with United Nations Human Rights group, ahead of fifty years of Tibetan uprising day on March 10 at Tibetan community center, in Katmandu, Nepal, Friday, March 6, 2009. The meeting was called by UNHR to brief Tibetans living in Katmandu about their rights and limitations of human rights. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)

BEIJING — Tensions are high in Tibet's capital and paramilitary police are out in force, Hong Kong tourists reported Friday, while Chinese authorities sought to portray a stable situation ahead of Tuesday's 50th anniversary of the failed uprising that forced the Dalai Lama into exile.

Armed officers are positioned across Lhasa, creating a highly "tense" atmosphere, and police also are blocking roads leading to eastern parts of Tibet, a 33-year-old Hong Kong traveler told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

Although they denied it, officials appeared to be on high alert for any trouble in Tibet and Tibetan-inhabited regions in western China to coincide with sensitive anniversaries coming up in the next week.

Tuesday marks a half-century since Tibetans rose up on March 10, 1959, in a futile attempt to end Chinese rule. Their Buddhist leader, the Dalai Lama, had to flee into exile in India, where he has been a potent symbol for Tibetans' aspirations.

Four days later will be the first anniversary of a deadly anti-government riot in Lhasa that spread protests across Tibetan areas in China. Officials say 22 people died, but Tibetans say many times more were killed in demonstrations and the ensuing military crackdown.

Tibet's governor, Qiangba Puncog, insisted to reporters Friday that authorities did not expect any large-scale troubles like last year. He said a few people allied with the Dalai Lama might try to create disturbances around the anniversaries.

"The Tibetan people's trust in the party and the motherland has not changed following the March 14th incident. The foundations of the Tibetan people are strong," Qiangba Puncog said while attending China's annual legislative session in Beijing.

Travelers and exile groups, however, have reported that China has deployed thousands of soldiers and paramilitary police in Tibetan areas to guard against a repeat of last year's protests.

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Kang Jinzhong, the political commissar of the paramilitary police in Tibet, would not say how many armed officers are stationed in the region, but said there had been "no special increase or supplement." He described the police deployment as "normal" since before the riots.

The tourist who talked with the AP was one of three backpackers from Hong Kong who he said were stopped by police and had their travel documents confiscated Wednesday on the edge of Bayi town, 185 miles (300 kilometers) east of Lhasa. The man, an engineer, identified himself only by his surname, Chu, because he was still in Tibet and feared retaliation by authorities.

Chu said the three were questioned for four hours about the purpose of their visit and then told they could not enter Bayi for security reasons. They were escorted back to Lhasa the next day. He said seven tourists from mainland China who were traveling with the Hong Kong trio were allowed to visit Bayi.

"If the authorities don't want us to visit, they shouldn't have allowed us to enter Tibet at all," he said.

The region has been mostly sealed off to journalists and foreigners for at least a month, but residents of China's semiautonomous Hong Kong territory are allowed to travel to Tibet without a special permit.

Chinese communist troops marched into Tibet in 1950, and the government claims the region has always been part of China. But many Tibetans say the Himalayan region was virtually independent for centuries and contend Beijing's tight control is eroding their culture and identity.

The protests a year ago were the worst uprising against Chinese rule since the failed rebellion in 1959.

Tibetan officials said Friday that 76 of the more than 950 people detained following the protests were sent to prison. The others were all freed after undergoing "education," they said, without elaborating.

___

Associated Press writers Anita Chang reported from Beijing and Dikky Sinn from Hong Kong.

BEIJING — Tensions are high in Tibet's capital and paramilitary police are out in force, Hong Kong tourists reported Friday, while Chinese authorities sought to portray a stable situation ahead ...
BEIJING — Tensions are high in Tibet's capital and paramilitary police are out in force, Hong Kong tourists reported Friday, while Chinese authorities sought to portray a stable situation ahead ...
 
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- wereeverywhere I'm a Fan of wereeverywhere 53 fans permalink
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Personal freedom? You should really choose your words more carefully. The Chinese government now gives Tibetans personal freedom? Is that like the freedom that George Bush brought to Iraq, that kind of freedom? I think you would better serve the cause of Chinese tyranny by coming up with a less loaded delusion than freedom (much less joy) to describe the state of Tibetans.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 PM on 3/08/2009
- FairTalk I'm a Fan of FairTalk 18 fans permalink
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Watch this to the end.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v3c1N1bUXpA&feature=channel_page

And remember, in Lasha last March, it was the supporters of the dalai lama who incited violence. It is they who did the killing. Who slaughtered Han, Hui and Tibetan alike. And those 5 innocent shop girls. And a 5 year old boy, and a doctor, and...

"Official figures show last year's violence in Lhasa left 18 people dead, and injured 382 civilians and 241 police officers. Rioters also set fire to 120 houses and 84 vehicles, and looted 1,367 shops, causing $47 million in economic losses." Including a primary and a missle school, and ambulances.

In fact the people of Tibet want the Chinese gov to prevent this kind of instability in the future. And, yes, personal freedom, like people in Tibet enjoy today if far better than being a serf or slave. You see, the Dalai Lama may believe that serfdom in Tibet, unlike Europe's dark ages was benign, but the emancipated serfs do not agree.

We cannot all be apoligists for slave owners. Some of us are not paid CIA agents! LOL

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 PM on 3/08/2009
- wereeverywhere I'm a Fan of wereeverywhere 53 fans permalink
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Ideology keeps you from seeing the reality that Tibetans want to be free from China. Look at your own post on the damage done- are we expected to believe that monks and nuns did all that? Without widespread public participation that would be impossible. For fifty years these people have struggled against an overwhelmingly better armed and funded force and took exceptional risks. You are so fixated on the Dalai Lama that you're blinded to this freedom struggle. Reducing a massively supported rebellion to one man or group of religious people is to fight against reality. It's pretty obvious that China is institutionally incapable of bringing 'freedom' to anyone right now (hopefully the restive Chinese labor movement will one day eradicate the planet of the Chinese Communist(sic) Party, but I digress).
The idea that Tibetans should be joyous that the nice Chinese liberated them, so joyous in fact that they should forget independence, makes no sense. It's like the argument that slavery for Blacks in USA and colonization for the Europeans did the world a favor- that they liberated backward savages and they in turn should be happy and submit. It took centuries but that notion was laid to rest. Just like one day the Tibetans, barring genocide, will lay Chinese misrule to rest.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 AM on 3/09/2009
- FairTalk I'm a Fan of FairTalk 18 fans permalink
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All those serfs and slaves who were emancipated by China in 1959 have no reason to be ashamed of the joy they take in their personal freedom.

For those of you who love to pray to a CIA agent, LOL.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 3/08/2009
- wereeverywhere I'm a Fan of wereeverywhere 53 fans permalink
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Today's talking point for those who support Chinese repression against the people of Tibet is that it's all a bunch of pesky priests and nuns who are causing all the trouble. As Qiangba Puncog (whose name translates to 'Quisling' ) says: "The Tibetan people's trust in the party and the motherland has not changed following the March 14th incident." The people of Tibet just love the all the attention they get from the lovable Chinese troops and police; the ordinary Tibetans love it when their land is stolen and the Chinese colonizers come in. But those nuns and priests just ruin the wonderful party by their resistance.
Or maybe the troops that are there now and that have had to be employed for 5 decades now show how widespread the resistance is? The poor Chinese tyrants and their supporters might have to come up with a more believable lie here. What with all their practice I'm sure they can do it.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:36 AM on 3/08/2009
- FairTalk I'm a Fan of FairTalk 18 fans permalink
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First of all, the Lama's are not "priests." Usually they are called "Monks."

In order to become a monk, one must meet certain requirements or standards.

The basic teaching, (of Buddhism, including the Tibetan version of Buddhism) includes understanding the cause of suffering.

Back in the 1970s a great Tibetan master taught us that one can practice anywhere. This was in response to our concerns about the urban environment and the US governments policies. I would imagine that one can also practice in Tibet today. There is freedom to practice Buddhism, Tibetan Buddhism, Bon, Christianity, Islam, or none of the above. The fact that the practice of sedition is not considered a right in China does not mean that one cannot practice one's religion. i know of no one who believes that sedition is a religion.

Pain and suffering are caused by confusion. Clinging to ones ego, the failure to let go of one's hunger, lusts and desires. I suggest that the "nuns" and "monks" your mention spend more of their time in meditation.

The majority of "tibetans" in Tibet work for a living and are not nuns nor monks. They fall in love, get married and have children. They want food, clothes and shoes, a home to call their own, a livelihood, oportunities to make their lives better, and to have a better future for their children. They value things like education, and medical care. None would volunteer to return to life under the Dalai Lama's regime.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:53 PM on 3/08/2009
- enoch2012 I'm a Fan of enoch2012 permalink

Free Tibet!!!

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 08:45 AM on 3/07/2009
- FairTalk I'm a Fan of FairTalk 18 fans permalink
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Another biased "news" report. It even contradicts itself.

Lets be clear here, "Tibetans" didn't rise up, nor did "Tibetans" riot in Lahsa last March, nor are "Tibetans" planing more demonstrations this March.

In fact, this story does claim that the Gov of Tibet, an ethnic Tibetan, stated it was those alied with the Dalai Lama who were the trouble makers.

The US State Department has confirmed that the Dalai Lama, and his two elder brothers, were on the CIA payrole since the in50s, with the Dalai Lama paid $180,000 annual by the CIA. In addition, the US paid 1.7 million annually to cause violent "uprisings" in China for the purpose of destabelizing China.

The so called uprisings were incited by the US CIA and the Ruling Class, Lords, and High Lamas who did not want to emancipate their serfs and slaves.

I do wish that so called "journalists," and so called "news reports" could be les biased, because they are just propaganda when the allow themselves to be used as a mouthpiece for the "Free Tibet" movement that has been inciting these incidents.

It is no wonder that China keeps these specious "news reporters" out of "sensitive" regions.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 PM on 3/06/2009
- wereeverywhere I'm a Fan of wereeverywhere 53 fans permalink
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I thank FairTalk on behalf of all us supporting the Tibetans' self-determination. Your clumsy denials of Chinese misconduct and equally clumsy attacks on the Tibetan people illustrate the logic of tyranny. You would have us pity the poor Chinese that have to enlighten these poor, backward Tibetans- a new white man's burden for our times. I find it a less than a compelling argument.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 3/08/2009
- FairTalk I'm a Fan of FairTalk 18 fans permalink
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Please provide a concrete example of Chinese "misconduct."

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 PM on 3/08/2009
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