Akong Tulku Rinpoche Dead: Prominent Tibetan Monk Reported Killed In Chengdu, China

Founder Of First Western Tibetan Buddhist Monastery Killed In China

Dr. Choje Akong Tulku Rinpoche, aged 73, was stabbed to death in Chengdu, a city in southwest China, according to police reports. His driver and his nephew who were accompanying him were also killed.

Akong was well-known as the co-founder of Europe's first Tibetan Buddhist monastery, the Kagyu Samye Ling Monastery in Dumfries and Galloway near the English-Scottish border in 1967.

His younger brother, Lama Yeshe Rinpoche, said in a Tuesday statement on the monastery's website that Akong had been killed in China, but that he had no other news until the results of the post-mortem.

Police in Chendgu confirmed the death of all three men and said "the deaths resulted from a financial quarrel."

Raw Story reports that a verified police social media account said that "three Tibetan men visited a house where the trio were staying and stabbed them to death in an argument over money."

Police told AFP on Wednesday that the three suspects were in custody.

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