China News  
SINO DAILY
Two Tibetans set themselves on fire: reports
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 2, 2016


One Chinese dead, three wounded in Laos attack: report
Beijing, China (AFP) March 2, 2016 - A Chinese national was killed and three others wounded in an attack in Laos, state media reported Wednesday, the second time this year workers from China have been targeted in the resource-rich nation.

The assault took place late Tuesday on property belonging to a Chinese-backed company in Laos' Luang Prabang province, Xinhua news agency said, without naming the business.

The report did not say who was behind the violence or why the workers may have been targeted.

But it said a pick-up truck and bus passing through the same district were also attacked later that night, leaving at least five Laos nationals injured.

Laos police were dispatched to "wipe out the militants," the report said.

Luang Prabang is a tourist haven, and the main city is a UNESCO site renowned for its colonial-era architecture and natural beauty.

The district where the attack took place is north of Xaisomboun, a province that has seen a spate of deadly bomb and gun attacks in recent months.

In January, two Chinese nationals were reportedly killed, including an employee of a Chinese mining company, and one injured in a suspected bomb attack in a mountainous region, prompting a travel warning from the US Embassy in Vientiane.

In the past, the area has hosted a shadowy insurgency by ethnic Hmong against Laos' Communist rulers.

The rebels are believed to be the remnants of anti-Communist militias recruited by the United States during its secret operations in Laos amid the Vietnam War.

Neither Laos nor China's Communist leaders touched on a suspected motive behind the assaults against Chinese nationals.

However Beijing's growing footprint in the poor nation has stirred unease in among locals in recent years.

China has invested heavily in Laos and funnelled its water, forestry and mineral extracts back to the mainland.

Laos will host president Barack Obama later this year as the culmination of its chairmanship of the ASEAN regional bloc.

Two Tibetans -- a monk in China and a teenager in India -- set themselves on fire on the same day to protest Beijing's ironclad control of the Himalayan region, a rights group and reports said Wednesday.

Kalsang Wangdu self-immolated in front of his monastery in a Tibetan area of Sichuan province on Monday, reported Radio Free Asia (RFA), which is funded by the US government.

London-based campaign group Free Tibet confirmed his death.

The monk's action was the first such protest in China this year, and brought the total number in the country to 144, RFA said.

As he burned, "he called out for Tibet's complete independence", it quoted an anonymous source in the area as saying.

Police in Xinlong county, where the incident took place, could not be reached for comment Wednesday, and a woman at its religious affairs bureau said only that her department was "not very clear" on the incident.

Beijing says its troops "peacefully liberated" Tibet in 1951 and insists it has since brought economic development to a previously backward region where serfs were exploited.

But many Tibetans accuse the central government of religious repression and eroding their culture, and its natural resources are increasingly being exploited in ways that benefit China's ethnic majority Han.

Tibetan monks within China have reported a campaign of government intimidation targeting the family and friends of those who set themselves on fire.

Also on Monday, 16-year-old Dorje Tsering set himself on fire in the northern Indian city of Dehradun, RFA and Free Tibet said.

He survived with burns to 95 percent of his body and was hospitalised in Delhi.

"I have had a strong determination to do something for Tibet since my childhood," a video showed him saying in his hospital bed, according to a translation by Free Tibet.

"I thought that there was nothing else I could do other than self-immolation, because if there is self-immolation, people get shocked, thinking that he set himself on fire for his country," he went on, speaking through an oxygen mask and with his face swollen.

"It seems the oil put on my body was not enough for it to burn completely," he added.

Free Tibet cited his father as saying that it was a heart-breaking incident but he was proud of his son.

The teenager is the eighth Tibetan to mount such a protest outside China, the group added.

Its director Eleanor Byrne-Rosengren said the boy's actions should "shame the political leaders who put more value on friendship with China than justice for Tibet".

"They should all watch this, and imagine if it was their child," she added.


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