The Tibet Express News World AP Interview: Tibetan exile warns of crackdown

The Tibet Express

Select Language

བོད་ཡིག繁體中文English
  • Create an account
    *
    *
    *
    *
    *
    Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required.
  • Search

AP Interview: Tibetan exile warns of crackdown

E-mail Print PDF
Dharamshala, February 14: Upcoming Tibetan New Year's celebrations appear poised to bring more bloodshed to the troubled Himalayan region, the head of Tibet's exile government said Tuesday, warning that China has sealed off the regions ahead of a crackdown.


Already facing nearly two dozen self-immolations, many by Buddhist monks and nuns calling for Tibetan freedom and the return of the Dalai Lama, China is sending thousands of extra security forces to Tibetan areas to prepare for expected protests.


"They have sealed off Tibet," Lobsang Sangay said during an interview with The Associated Press. He said festivals around the Feb. 22 Tibetan New Year, as well as the March 10 anniversary of the failed 1959 uprising, are very likely to bring Tibetans into the streets.


But with the region closed to outsiders — foreign tourists have been ordered to leave and Western reporters are effectively barred — it will be almost impossible to know the reality of the situation.


"Chinese security personnel are cracking down on Tibetans for one pretext or another, and the world will not know whether they were arrested, whether they were tortured, whether they were killed," he said in Dharmsala, India, where the Dalai Lama and the exile government are based.


Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Tuesday defended China's policies on Tibet, saying the government respects traditional culture and freedom of religious belief. He said China has invested heavily in Tibet and will continue to do so.


Tibetan areas of western China have faced spiraling unrest in recent months, amid the wave of self-immolations and a series of sometimes-bloody protests. The violence, much of it in Sichuan province, is the worst in Tibetan regions since 2008.


The information that does emerge is seldom complete, with few details about the people who have burned themselves alive or the protests.


On Monday, a teenage monk set himself on fire in Sichuan's Aba prefecture, according to the London-based International Campaign for Tibet said. The monk was beaten by security forces as they put out the flames, the rights group said. His condition was not known.


Beijing has blamed outsiders and extremists for trying to incite violence or undermine China, while Sangay and other Tibetan leaders say the self-immolations reflect an increasingly desperate population unable to express themselves any other way.


"You can't have hunger strikes, you can't have demonstrations, you can't write petitions," Sangay said. "Given such repressive policies and actions, Tibetans are pushed to the brink of desperation."


"They are thinking that perhaps this form of action will bring some attention to the grievances of the Tibetan people," he said.


Beijing accuses the self-proclaimed exile government of seeking to separate Tibet from China. But exiles and the Dalai Lama say they simply wants a high degree of autonomy under Chinese rule.


China occupied Tibet in 1950 and claims the region has been part of its territory for centuries, though Tibetans say the Himalayan region was virtually independent for centuries. (AP)

Last Updated ( 15 February 2012 )  

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

  • The Tibet Express

  • Tri-lingual Websites

  • Translations

The Tibet Express (Bod-Kyi-Bang-Chen) is legally registered under the Information department and Press of Indian government. It is the first ever independent Tibetan weekly newsletter in our Tibetan society and till date, it is being widely distributed in around twenty different countries.

 

The head office of this weekly newsletter is based at Dharamsala in Himachal Pradesh and its branch agencies are based in the most populated exile settlements Byllakuppe and Mundgod. (Its branch agency based in Kathmandu, Nepal has been compelled to close on 5th March 2009 after the regional reporter was detained by local police. He was released after paying the sum of Nepali Rupees six and half lakhs as bribe, but legally stopped us to continue our work there. Therefore, the branch agency based in Nepal is temporarily closed). The newsletter Bod-kyi-bang-chen is being printed and distributed simultaneously in Dharamsala, Mundgod and Byllakuppe.

Anyone can enter our website from both the addresses either tibetexpress.net or bangchen.net and both have same content. One can enrich one’s knowledge from our website by choosing any language either English or Tibetan or Chinese and also the readers can do online discussion and debate on any topic. Especially, one can get updated information about in and outside Tibet in our Tibetan web-version and one can participate in discussion through blog as well. We keep on working hard on tri-lingual discussion forums, articles on religion and culture, monasteries in exile, Tibetan settlements, etc.



Convallis sed amet ac fringilla congue vel justo ipsum pretium ipsum. Ullamcorper vitae turpis ullamcorper sit hendrerit vitae ac ac id aliquam

We try our level best to translate any articles written by foreign learned and scholars on Tibetan issues, or any other important contemporary studies, articles written by Tibetans in other languages like English or Chinese. Khawa Karpo Tibet Culture Centre has published four books so far and whenever we find any book in other language which are important for Tibet and Tibetans, then we’ll surely work hard to translate and publish them. We have translated Wang Lixiong’s two important articles on Tibet and have kept in our paper, and it has received much appreciation and acknowledgement from our readers.



Convallis sed amet ac fringilla congue vel justo ipsum pretium ipsum. Ullamcorper vitae turpis ullamcorper sit hendrerit vitae ac ac id aliquam

འདི་ནས་དཔར་སྐྲུན་བྱས་པའི་དཔེ་དེབ།

Photo News

  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow
  • An Image Slideshow