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China hit by more self-immolation protests
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Oct 8, 2011

Indian police detain Tibetans outside China embassy
New Delhi (AFP) Oct 9, 2011 - Indian police detained 13 Tibetan students on Sunday at a protest outside the Chinese embassy in New Delhi after two men reportedly set themselves on fire at a monastery in southwest China.

About 20 young protesters from India's large Tibetan exile community climbed lamp posts and raised anti-Beijing banners before the police moved in and bundled them into vans.

"They were protesting to highlight that seven men have set themselves on fire this year in self-immolation attempts against Chinese repression and China's intensified military crackdown," activist Tsering Tashi told AFP.

"We youngsters want to show the world that we will never give up fighting," Tashi, coordinator of the Delhi chapter of the Students for a Free Tibet group, said.

A Delhi police official, who declined to be named, said that 13 students including seven girls were detained at the demonstration against the Chinese government.

Tibetan rights groups said that two young men set themselves on fire on Friday near a Tibetan Buddhist monastery in southwest China.

The latest incidents take the number of people reported to have set themselves ablaze to seven this year.

The two were former monks from Sichuan province's Kirti monastery, the scene of repeated protests against perceived religious oppression, the London-based Free Tibet group said in statement.

It said there were unconfirmed reports that one had died.

Many Tibetans inside and outside China are angry about what they view as increasing domination by the country's majority Han ethnic group.

China, however, says that Tibetan living standards have improved with billions of dollars in Chinese investment.

In August, China jailed three monks for helping a young monk kill himself in March, raising criticism from the United States and rights groups.


Two young men set themselves on fire Friday near a Tibetan Buddhist monastery in southwest China amid rumours that dozens of monks were ready to "sacrifice their lives", rights groups said.

The two -- named as Choepel and Khayang -- were former monks from Sichuan province's Kirti monastery, the scene of repeated protests against perceived religious oppression, the London-based Free Tibet said in statement.

The latest incidents -- confirmed by another rights group with contacts in the region -- take the number of people reported to have set themselves on fire to seven this year.

Free Tibet, an activist group, said there were unconfirmed reports that Choepel, 19, had died while the condition of Khayang, 18, was not known.

China's official Xinhua news agency later reported the two were receiving treatment at a local hospital and quoted a county government spokesman as saying their injuries were not life-threatening. It gave their ages as 18 and 20.

The former monks were wearing street clothes when they set themselves alight on Friday morning in the centre of Aba town.

"Rumours are circulating that dozens of monks are now ready to sacrifice their lives," Free Tibet director Stephanie Brigden said in a statement.

Brigden said there were reports that pamphlets had been distributed around the monastery and market place in Aba warning of further deaths if "Chinese policies at the monastery and in the town continue".

AFP calls to the government and police in Aba went unanswered.

The restive Tibetan Buddhist monastery has been the scene of repeated protests, according to rights groups, and previous self-immolations in the region have triggered a crackdown.

The number of monks at Kirti monastery has fallen to about 600 from 2,500 in March due to "compulsory patriotic re-education, detentions and expulsions", Free Tibet said, citing sources in the region.

Brigden said Choepel had been expelled from the monastery in March. It was not known why Khayang had left.

"Local sources report that there are still high numbers of security personnel in the town and increased numbers of soldiers billeted outside. Locals describe the town as being 'completely under control'," she said.

Three monks from Kirti monastery attempted self-immolations in recent weeks in apparent protests against perceived religious repression. Another two reported cases in the same Tibetan region happened in August and March.

In August, China jailed three monks for between 10 and 13 years for helping a young monk kill himself in March, raising criticism from the United States and rights groups.

Many Tibetans in China are angry about what they view as increasing domination by the country's majority Han ethnic group.

China, however, says that Tibetan living standards have improved with billions of dollars in Chinese investment.

Washington-based International Campaign for Tibet (ICT) -- another rights group -- said "aggressive troops" had occupied Kirti making it "almost impossible for the monks to carry out their practice and live as normal human beings".

"We need to look deeper to understand what is driving these young monks to sacrifice themselves," ICT spokeswoman Kate Saunders said.

"It may be linked to what many Kirti monks will be experiencing as a living death under oppression."

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US-based Chinese dissident barred from Hong Kong
Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 8, 2011 - A prominent US-based Chinese dissident was denied entry to Hong Kong on Friday and deported to Taiwan.

US renews calls on China to free dissident Liu
Washington (AFP) Oct 7, 2011 - The United States renewed calls Friday for China to free jailed dissident Liu Xiaobo who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize one year ago.

State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland took the opportunity of the awarding of this year's peace prize to "renew our call to the Chinese government to release him and to stop harassing his wife."

Nuland also said: "A year after his Nobel peace prize, he is still in jail. Three years after he was sentenced, he is still in jail, and not only that, the Chinese authorities are harassing and holding under house arrest his wife."

Convicted for subversion in December 2009 after co-writing the pro-democracy manifesto Charter 08, Liu became the first Chinese citizen ever to win the prestigious Nobel peace award on October 8 last year.

In the 12 months since then, rights groups say the government has placed Liu's wife under house arrest without charge and violated Chinese law by not allowing him monthly family visits.

Nuland urged China to "uphold Chinese international human rights obligations."

Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, compatriot "peace warrior" Leymah Gbowee and Yemen's Arab Spring activist Tawakkul Karman won the 2011 Nobel Peace Prize on Friday in a nod to women's empowerment.

Yang Jianli was refused entry into Hong Kong when he arrived on a flight from the United States via Taiwan, public broadcaster RTHK reported late Friday.

Yang was scheduled to attend a two-day academic forum in the former British colony, which returned to Chinese rule in 1997 with its own political and legal system, according to RTHK.

An immigration department spokesman declined to confirm Yang's deportation, saying it would not comment on individual cases.

US permanent resident Yang spent five years in jail in China on charges of spying and illegal entry in a case which sparked criticism from the United States and the United Nations. He was released in 2007.

The activist fled China following the 1989 Tiananmen democracy protests and was blacklisted by the government, which refused to renew his passport or issue him travel documents to return to his homeland.

He tried to sneak into China in April 2002, but was arrested in the southwestern city of Kunming.

Yang has also been turned away from Hong Kong in 2008 and 2009.

Pro-democracy groups have condemned Hong Kong for becoming intolerant of dissent and bowing to pressure from China by barring visits of mainland dissidents.

Two former leaders of the Tiananmen protests were refused entry to attend the funeral of a Hong Kong democracy icon in January this year.



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