Chinese Government Accuses Monks Of Planning Suicide Attacks

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AUDRA ANG | April 1, 2008 02:36 PM EST | AP

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Policemen drag away Tibetans as they protest against China outside the Chinese Embassy in Katmandu, Nepal, Tuesday April 1, 2008. (AP Photo/ Saurabh Das)

BEIJING — China has branded the Dalai Lama a "wolf in monk's robes" and his followers the "scum of Buddhism." It stepped up the rhetoric Tuesday, accusing the Nobel Peace laureate and his supporters of planning suicide attacks.

The Tibetan government-in-exile swiftly denied the charge, and the Bush administration rushed to the Tibetan Buddhist leader's defense, calling him "a man of peace."

"There is absolutely no indication that he wants to do anything other than have a dialogue with China on how to discuss the serious issues there," State Department spokesman Tom Casey said.

Wu Heping, spokesman for China's Ministry of Public Security, claimed searches of monasteries in the Tibetan capital had turned up a large cache of weapons. They included 176 guns, 13,013 bullets, 7,725 pounds of explosives, 19,000 sticks of dynamite and 350 knives, he said.

"To our knowledge, the next plan of the Tibetan independence forces is to organize suicide squads to launch violent attacks," Wu told a news conference. "They claimed that they fear neither bloodshed nor sacrifice."

Wu provided no details or evidence. He used the term "gan si dui," a rarely used phrase directly translated as "dare-to-die corps." The official English version of his remarks translated the term as "suicide squads."

Wu said police had arrested an individual who he claimed was an operative of the "Dalai Lama clique," responsible for gathering intelligence and distributing pamphlets calling for an uprising.

The suspect admitted to using code words to communicate with his contacts, including "uncle" for the Dalai Lama and "skirts" for the banned Tibetan snow lion flag, Wu said.

Beijing has repeatedly accused the Dalai Lama and his supporters of orchestrating violence in Lhasa, the Tibetan capital. Protests which began peacefully there on the March 10 anniversary of a 1959 uprising against Chinese rule spiraled out of control four days later.

Chinese officials have put the death toll at 22, most of them Han Chinese; the government-in-exile says 140 Tibetans were killed.

China also says sympathy protests that spread to surrounding provinces are part of a campaign by the Dalai Lama to sabotage the Beijing Olympics and promote Tibetan independence.

The 72-year-old Dalai Lama has condemned the violence and denied any links to it, urging an independent international inquiry into the unrest.

"Tibetan exiles are 100 percent committed to nonviolence. There is no question of suicide attacks," Samdhong Rinpoche, prime minister of the government-in-exile in Dharmsala, India, said Tuesday. "But we fear that Chinese might masquerade as Tibetans and plan such attacks to give bad publicity to Tibetans."

Experts on terrorism and security risks facing Beijing and the Olympics have not cited any Tibet group as a threat.

Scholars said the claim of suicide squads was a calculated move by China allowing it to step up its crackdown in Tibetan areas.

"There is no evidence of support for any kind of violence against China or Chinese," said Dibyesh Anand, a Tibet expert at Westminster University in London.

Instead, Beijing is "portraying to the rest of China and the rest of the world: these people are basically irrational" and that there was no room for compromise, he said.

Tuesday's accusations could also further divide the Tibetan government-in-exile and other groups like the Tibetan Youth Congress, which has challenged the Dalai Lama's policy of nonviolence, Anand said.

"This is a way of pressuring the Dalai Lama to renounce Tibetans who have created violence," he said.

Andrew Fischer, a fellow at the London School of Economics who researches Chinese development policies in Tibetan areas of China, dismissed Wu's warnings as "completely ridiculous."

What China is trying to do "is justify this massive troop deployment, a massive crackdown on Tibetan areas and they're trying to justify intensification of hard-line policies," Fischer said.

Drawing from a deep historical reserve of angry rhetoric, Tibet's tough-talking Chinese Communist Party boss, Zhang Qingli, recently called the Dalai Lama a "wolf in monk's robes, a devil with a human face, but the heart of a beast" and deemed the current conflict a "life-and-death battle." State media has denounced protesting monks as the "scum of Buddhism."

The campaign against the Dalai Lama has been underscored in recent days with showings of decades-old propaganda films on state television portraying Tibetan society as cruel and primitive before the 1950 invasion by communist troops.

The escalation of the rhetoric to include claims of possible suicide attacks may also touch upon another sensitive issue for China's communist leadership _ unrest in Xinjiang, a predominantly Muslim region to Tibet's north, and Beijing's tight security measures in the area.

Last month, state media reported that a woman had confessed to attempting to hijack and crash a Chinese passenger plane from Xinjiang in what officials say was part of a terror campaign by a radical Islamic independence group, the East Turkestan Islamic Movement. The reports said the woman was from China's Turkic Muslim Uighur minority.

While the United States has labeled the East Turkestan Islamic Movement a terrorist organization, the State Department alleges widespread abuses of the legal and educational systems by the communist authorities to suppress Uighur culture and religion.

Fischer said China has tried to change the "nonviolent, compassionate" image of Tibetans into one of violence and brutality to draw parallels to the pro-independence stance in Xinjiang.

"If they succeed in portraying them that way, then they can treat them the same way they treat Muslims in Xinjiang," he said.

____

Associated Press writers Christopher Bodeen and Anita Chang in Beijing and Ashwini Bhatia in Dharmsala, India, contributed to this report.


 
 

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The glorious People's Republic of China denounce the running dog imperialist lackeys of the evil animal like Dali Lama. Furthermore we warn the world that these lackeys will make suicide attacks against the glorious People's Army by impaling themselves against the bayonets and bullets of our glorious solders. Furthermore they will do so while running away like cowardly dogs that they are in a sniveling attempt to die groveling before the imperialist foreign media.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 AM on 04/02/2008

Ah, there we are: the mindset of the Chinese government . You wear barbarism and brutality like a fine suit of clothes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:56 AM on 04/02/2008

By the way, I hope you got that I was mocking them. The only suicide these monks will be attempting will be standing up for their rights against the PRC.

Boycott the Olympics of Oppression!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 AM on 04/02/2008

You did such an excellent job parodying that I actually took you at face value! Yikes. Thanks for setting me straight!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 AM on 04/02/2008

The Chinese government is full of shit, as usual, but I'm not Chinese and don't have to live there and put up with that bullshit. Sucks to be them, of course, but it's not as if the great mass of Chinese people have suddenly lost something they'd always had.

The young Tibetan hotheads seem to have stepped in sh*t, tho' it's easy to understand their anger. Like Bush in Iraq, in their ignorance they've handed their enemy an easy victory. They've also allowed the Chinese government a major propaganda victory, enabling them to link the Dalai Lama to the worst excesses of a constituency that barely respects him.

Not smart, not smart at all.

Nah, I wouldn't boycott the Olympics over this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:38 AM on 04/02/2008

Boycott the Genocide Olympics!!! Free Tibet!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 PM on 04/01/2008

The Chinese government is comprised of beings so utterly fanatical about power and control that they cannot allow a few monks in a small country to entertain so much as a thought which is somewhat different from theirs. They publish incredible lies about HH The Dalai Lama, who --- by doing and saying nothing --- except that he wishes he could sit down and talk with them --- is perceived by them as a great threat to their security.
I am sure that HH The Dalai Lama knows that apparent reality is actually a mirror of the mind. So that, by describing HH The Dalai Lama as a criminal, the Chinese government are describing themselves. Everything about him which they describe as conniving and underhanded, it is truly themselves that they are talking about.
Lest I be accused of being anti-Chinese, let me assure that I greatly admired China's history and culture for many years.
I've met monks who survived 16 years of Chinese torture prisons. And they still held onto their deep faith and harbor no ill feelings. I have met many lay Tibetans who were required to attend long hours of Communist indoctrination. Fortunately they were able to escape.
Essentially, the Chinese position is devoid of moral authority. The Chinese have, for entirely too long, been seen by the entire world, to be morally inferior to the Tibetans. Certainly in this recent struggle they have entirely lost face.
BOYCOTT THE OLYMPICS!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:38 PM on 04/01/2008

What's with the "HH The Dalai Lama" thing? I mean he is personally a nice, very charismatic guy, but I prefer to call people by their real names. All that honorific stuff sounds pretty cultish. We're talking about Lhamo Dhondup, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:00 PM on 04/01/2008

To splendid1:

Ever heard of being respectful? Something that you obviously don't seem to know anything about.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:18 PM on 04/01/2008

Obviously? You can call me Mr. Splendid1. ;-)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:33 AM on 04/02/2008

Ignoramus.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 PM on 04/01/2008

FINALLY HUFFPO takes down the Nepalese photograph on the front page.

That article is a stinker though -- there is a group called the Tibetan Youth Congress that have supported violence for the cause of Independence. They have a bunch of posts on YouTube, and there are other references to them on Google. This is where the government-cited "Tibetan Uprising Movement" came from -- THIS GROUP. Not the Dalai Lama.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:09 PM on 04/01/2008

From Wikipedia - x - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tibet - matched by Encyclopedia Britannica - http://www.britannica.com/ebc/article-9380726. Hmm.

Many parts of the region were united in the seventh century by King Songtsän Gampo. In 1751, the Qing dynasty, which ruled China from 1644 to 1912, established the Dalai Lama as both the spiritual leader and political leader of Tibet who led a government (Kashag) with four Kalöns in it.[2] Between the 17th century and 1951, the Dalai Lama and his regents were the predominant political power administering religious and administrative authority[3] over large parts of Tibet from the traditional capital Lhasa.

Tibet proclaimed its independence from China in 1911 on the eve of the fall of the Qing dynasty and it's subsequent internal turmoil, while China never renounced its claim of sovereignty to Tibet.[citation needed] No country formally recognized Tibet as an independent country from 1912 to 1951. Tibet remained a defacto independent state until shortly after the conclusion of the Chinese civil war, when on October 1, 1949, the People's Republic of China was formally proclaimed in Beijing and the following year launched an armed invasion of Tibet.[4] The Chinese army of 40,000 men routed the unprepared defending Tibetan army of only 5,000 near the city of Chamdo. The defeat subsequently led to he signing of the Seventeen point agreement by the Tibetan Government. Currently every country in the world recognizes China's sovereignty over Tibet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:25 PM on 04/01/2008

oh c'mon. suicide attacks? they're buddhists not muslims.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:12 PM on 04/01/2008

you both speaks half truth. Tibet was part of Chinese Empire for 700+ years but the central government has never had a direct control over it as the Communist had since 1959.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:50 PM on 04/01/2008

well, if you study history of Tibet, and read a few real scholastics books, you will find the history of Tibetan Buddhism is full of bloodshed. No less than the history of Christianity or Islam.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 PM on 04/01/2008

Why there is no so many people get upset about media here keep using NEPALESE policemen"s pictures to accuse CHINESE beat up TIBETAN monks?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:09 PM on 04/01/2008

You are right that the photo is misleading. But the news is from Beijing, and it centers around the Chinese embassy in Katmandu. Nepal is responding to pressure from China-- as other governments around the world sometimes do. In Canada, when there were peaceful protests outside the Chinese embassy in Vancouver the authorities refused to step in. The embassy employees photographed protesters and let them know that their relatives in China would be paying for the protests. This thinned the crowd somewhat, but others not of Tibetan or Chinese descent soon joined.

This repressive behaviour is a legacy of Mao.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:21 PM on 04/01/2008

Hi YankeeCanuck,

Thank you for agree with me that the photo is misleading, and that kind of pictures are all over the media here.

I don't think what the Chinese embassy employees did(photographed protesters and let them know that their relatives in China would be paying for the protests) was right.

I know for sure that would happen 30 years ago, can"t believe that they are still so stupid! Do you have any reliable evidences like pictures or names?

As I know, the protest in Lhasa is not that peaceful.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/26/AR2008032603275.html

Have you heard there was also a peaceful rally by Chinese Canadian citizens last Saturday in Toronto?

Please read both the report on
http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/2411
and
http://www.canadafreepress.com/letters/index.php

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:41 PM on 04/01/2008

WE GOT IT THE FIRST TIME SPARKY!

GO BACK TO YOUR CAVE NOW AND COLLECT YOUR CHECK!

YOU HAVE CONVINCED ALL OF US IT IS REALLY NEPAL'S FAULT AND THAT CHINA
IS PURE AS A DRIVEN SNOW!

GREAT JOB!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:17 PM on 04/01/2008

Thank you!

But I do want a real answer!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:22 PM on 04/01/2008

Lindainus,

Several reasons: This website is not a news site. It is a blog reposting other people's content.. It only makes money when you're eyeballing the page.
The editors here know how to manipulate content to squeeze income stream from each page; hence the misleading but provocative headlines.
Haven't you ever sneaked a peak at National Inquirer headline at the supermarket?-- same business model.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 04/01/2008

The Chinese government has lost what little respect I had for them. They're a bunch of lying thugs. Do they think they can spin the global media the way they censor in their own country? Do they think they're fooling anyone? Personally, I'm going to step up my effort to check for "made in China" labels and buy products manufactured elsewhere. There is also no chance I am watching any Olympic events, or traveling to China in the near future.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:02 PM on 04/01/2008

I don't believe what Chinese government tells me, I don't believe what GW Bush tells me, and I don't believe what Dalai Lama tells me. To be fair, each side other tells half of the truth. Tibetan exiles claims 140+ dead, but no pictures, no names, all factious too. There is little possibility Chinese authority can control the information flow so effectively so that no pictures or any details information ever leaked out on the crack down that kills 140 Tibetans. If they really achieved that, i will have to give them a lot of respect.

Doug, you are free to bycott any thing labeled made in China, but some of them actually made in Tibet. You don't have to travel to China, but tourism account for 1/8+ of GDP of Tibet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:36 PM on 04/01/2008

Well done kyeblue. Exactly what I have learned. I search the middle for the truth!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:47 PM on 04/01/2008

Boycott the Genocide Olympics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:56 PM on 04/01/2008

This is obscene, seeing heavily armed soldiers attacking unarmed monks.

Yet another sad consequence of the U.S. invasion/occupation of Iraq, Abu Ghraib, Gitmo, "extraordinary renditions", U.S. sponsored torture, etc., is that when a voice of moral authority is now desperately needed to speak out against a human rights atrocity, the hands of the U.S. government are now too dirty to be a credible voice against human rights abuses.

In the meantime, non-violent monks are being clubbed and beaten to death while the World watches helplessly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:56 PM on 04/01/2008

Those heavily armed soldiers are not Chinese. They are actually Nepalese. The photos are from Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal. You can tell they are Nepalese because of the pattern of the camo. It's error is all over the web.

There are serious issues, but misrepresenting the facts to paint a juicier picture is just bad journalism. Thank you Fox News for setting the bar so low, no one seems to give a damn.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:50 PM on 04/01/2008

I agree, photos of heavily armed soldiers attacking unarmed monks would be obscene. Care to share a link to such photos?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 04/01/2008

The US stood by when genocide occurred in Cambodia, Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo and Srebrenica. US interests were not threatened. That was the rationale for inaction. The rationale for action in the invasion of Iraq was equally faulty and shameful.

Yes, it is obscene to see unarmed people clubbed. It affects all of us-- it is an assault upon our humanity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 04/01/2008

The monks you see being carried away by guards in uniform are not in China.
They are in Nepal.

What is happening in Tibet is not genocide. The Dalai Lama has called it 'cultural genocide', but the measure for this is tricky. There is far more WESTERN influence on Tibetans in Lhasa than there is Han Chinese. The Tibetans speak their own language and then must learn Mandarin (the national language) in secondary school -- they need this language to be competitive. The region is 95% Tibetan, and there are many non-religious Tibetans in government themselves -- it is not genocide. China needs to change their Tibet policy, which has not provided enough economic opportunity, and does not allow open worship of the Dalai Lama, who they fear is a separatist. Tibet will never be an independent country.

The only hope is for the Dalai Lama and Beijing to sit down and negotiate.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:27 PM on 04/01/2008

The world is not helpless.

They are just needlessly afraid of China.

We should boycott the Olympics and park the Pacific Fleet
in the Straits of Formosa for a few months
and conduct a few war games.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 04/01/2008

Blutus - why is it that any discussion about global politics in American always winds up leading to using the military? Yes, spend more of my tax dollars on pointless saber rattling. http://www.antiwar.com/justin/j032608b.html.

Why don't we send the Pacific Fleet home so our Navy men and women can spend some time with their families, and maybe help do some repairs to our crumbling neighborhoods? Protect their families and friends homes from foreclosure? Where are your priorities?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:01 PM on 04/01/2008

Hi Blutus.

I agree that the World is not helpless in fact.

But while we continue to do nothing, the monks are helpless in fact.

And it is not the Chinese miltary that the U.S. fears, it's their threat to dump U.S. dollars and send our already fragile economy down the tubes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:26 PM on 04/01/2008

... which would of course send China's economy down the tubes as well. I think this is one of those cut off your nose to spite your face scenarios. And so far, on the international stage, only America has been rash enough to do this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:52 PM on 04/01/2008

It is NEPALESE policemen beat up TIBETAN monks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:07 PM on 04/01/2008

Roger that!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:18 PM on 04/01/2008

This is all based on information from an "operative" of the "Dalai Lama clique"???