Tibet: September 2007 Archives

By Keith Bradsher | The New York Times
26 September 2007

Eight boys ages 14 and 15 have been detained in the Tibetan town of Xiahe since Sept. 7 for writing graffiti and distributing pamphlets praising the Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual leader, and for calling for independence from China, according to Human Rights in China, which called for their release. The state-controlled news media have been silent on the case, and a man answering the phone at the Xiahe public security office said he had no information.

China warns Germany over Dalai Lama meeting

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By Robert J. Saiget - AFP - via (uncensored) Yahoo! News
September 25, 2007

China on Tuesday said that a meeting between German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the Dalai Lama had damaged ties between the two nations, and called for Berlin to quickly fix the problem.

"This not only grossly interferes with the internal affairs of China, it hurts the feelings of the Chinese people and seriously undermines China-Germany relations," foreign ministry spokesman Jiang Yu said when asked about Sunday's meeting.

"We request that Germany... take concrete and effective measures to eliminate the negative impact made by this mistaken move so as not to bring any unnecessary damage to China-Germany relations."

Defying harsh warnings from China, Merkel held a historic meeting with the Tibetan spiritual leader in Berlin on Sunday, during which she gave support to the Dalai Lama's quest for greater cultural autonomy for his homeland.

In an apparent response, China cancelled two top-level bilateral meetings, one a standing breakfast between the countries' foreign ministers on the sidelines of the annual UN General Assembly in New York.

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Merkel angers China on Dalai Lama

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By BBC News
September 23, 2007

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is to meet the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, on Sunday in talks that have angered China.

Chinese officials have cancelled planned talks with German counterparts in Munich on legal and patent issues.

Germany says the meeting with the Dalai Lama, who fled Tibet in 1959 after a failed uprising, is a private exchange.

But China, which governs Tibet, says the meeting is part of the Dalai Lama's agenda for Tibetan independence.

'Conscious' decision

Sunday's meeting will be the first time the Dalai Lama has been received at the chancellery.

China has already summoned the German ambassador in Beijing to complain.

However, German deputy government spokesman Thomas Steg said: "The meeting will take place, the invitation stands, and the chancellor also extended the invitation very consciously."

The German justice ministry said the legal talks had been cancelled for "technical reasons".

The Dalai Lama told the German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung that Beijing was showing the "arrogance of power".

"Wherever I go, China protests. The Chinese are simply testing how far they can go," the Nobel Peace Prize winner said.

China Detains Tibetans in Lhasa Trader Dispute

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By Radio Free Asia
September 14, 2007 

Chinese authorities in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa have detained six Tibetans after they lodged an appeal against the relocation of their trading stalls to make way for a new pedestrian walkway.

"The Lhasa municipal government detained six Tibetans on Sept. 13 for appealing against the official order of relocation of their shops near the Tibetan Medical Center in Lhasa," a caller from Lhasa told RFA's Tibetan service.

"All the traders selling their merchandise on stalls in front of the Tibetan Medicine Center...in the Central Cathedral area were ordered to move their shops to the third level of a new business complex in the Bakhor area."

A group of traders had staged a sit-in at the Lhasa municipal government offices in protest, saying that business wouldn't be nearly as good in the new location.

Petition to government

The traders had originally been given carts by the government and had gradually bought them as part of a poverty alleviation scheme.

"We want to request that the Lhasa municipal government allow us to continue in the same place," one Tibetan trader said.

"If we move to the other building on the third floor of the new complex, there will be no business. We rely on these small businesses for our livelihood. and if we are relocated, our business will suffer," he said.

"China's Communist Party is all--powerful, and many dare not raise their voice. We are actually bringing our concerns about our daily livelihood to the authorities and we are not talking of politics. But many Tibetans dare not speak up for fear of reprisals."

"The fact is that all good business locations in Lhasa area are going to Chinese and the Tibetans are losing them," he added.

An official who answered the phone at the Lhasa municipal government confirmed the dispute had taken place, but declined to give further details.

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Campaigning for Tibet freedom

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by Dakshana Bascaramurty  | The Charlatan
September 05, 2007

Lhadon Tethong was deported from China due to her political and social views of Tibet and China relations

Lhadon Tethong, executive director of Students for a Free Tibet (SFT), visited China for the first time after years of protests and campaigns against what she views as an invasion of a free people and state.

She blogged her way through Beijing with her colleague Paul Golding, documenting her views on beijingwideopen.org and China's "illegal occupation of Tibet," she says. She strategically timed her travels to take place exactly one year before the 2008 Olympic Games.

Though not a member of the group that unfurled a 450-square foot banner over the Great Wall of China that read: 'One World, One Dream, Free Tibet 2008', Tethong says her blog entries led to her deportation.

Arrested on Aug. 8 and detained in a downtown Beijing police station, she was questioned for six hours by the metropolitan and plain-clothes police.

"[They] were interested in what we were doing, why were in China [and if] were we trying to recruit for our cause," she says. 

Tethong was detained for less than 12 hours before being deported to Hong Kong. 

"In the end, I was deported from China because I was, [according to the police], undermining the stability of the Chinese government," she says.

Tethong grew up hearing about Tibetan issues and its standing on the international stage, especially from her Tibetan father.

Yet it was only at a Free Tibet concert in San Francisco in 1996, that she became actively involved in the cause.

That same year, the history student at Nova Scotia's King's College started a chapter of the organization in Halifax.

After graduating Tethong worked at the Toronto Stock Exchange. But she packed her bags and left Toronto after applying and receiving the program co-ordinator post at the SFT's New York City location.

As one of three staff members, Tethong says she was in charge of many things including seminars, public speaking and campaigns.

Now, with four years as executive director under her belt, the organization has chapters in countries worldwide, including Australia, Cameroon and the Czech Republic.

While Tethong has dealt first-hand with how information on freedom for Tibetans is heavily restricted by Chinese authorities, she uses the Internet as an activist tool.

"It's illegal to discuss the issue [of Tibet] if you are over there [in China]," she says while waiting in an airport for a flight to Canada after her tumultuous trip.

She says this interview and story would have been impossible to complete if she were back in the communist state.

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August 31, 2007

WASHINGTON -- The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom voices its strong concern over the People's Republic of China's new regulations requiring government approval of "Living Buddhas," which goes into effect on Saturday, Sept. 1. The regulations are clearly designed to undermine the influence of the Dalai Lama, the Tibetans' preeminent spiritual leader, and constitute continuing state violation of internationally guaranteed religious freedom rights in China.

The measures elaborate on Article 27 of China's National Regulations on Religious Affairs issued in March 2005. The new regulations instruct all reincarnate Tibetan lamas to "respect and protect the principles of unification of the state" and declare that no "foreign organization or individual" shall "interfere" in the process of recognizing or enthroning Living Buddhas. In cases where reincarnate lamas have "a relatively large impact," "a great impact," or "a particularly great impact," the regulations state, it is necessary to obtain approval from the provincial or regional governments, the national State Administration of Religious Affairs, or from the State Council, the highest government body in China.

"The Chinese government's policy of suppressing religious freedom in Tibet, including its denial of the right of Tibetan Buddhists to select their own religious leaders, again demonstrates Beijing's violation of international covenants recognizing the basic right of religious communities to choose their religious leaders and teachers," said Commission Chair Michael Cromartie. "China continues to pursue unacceptable policies repressing Tibetan Buddhists."

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Readers' Comments

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  • 匿名: 我也不知道说什么,反正我们真的什么也不知道,但是我们觉得有很多的真的是太残忍了。比如计划生育的政策,很多的农民因为这样子的多生了一个孩子而全家被杀死或者全村人都去坐牢了。我们也不知道... [more]
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  • han: This just shows that how China cannot exist within a vacuum. Everything is inter-related. Y... [more]