100th Tibetan self-immolation reported in a protest China can't stop

Ray

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100th Tibetan self-immolation reported in a protest China can't stop

February 13, 2013

BEIJING — An account released on Wednesday of an ethnic Tibetan man in western China lighting himself on fire earlier this month, calling for the long life of the Dalai Lama before dying in the flames, marked the 100th reported self-immolation since 2009, a dramatic milestone in a series of fiery protests that Beijing has sought to crack down on but has not managed to stop.

The fact that news of the man's Feb. 3 death – he's been identified as Lobsang Namgyal, 37 – took 10 days to surface in a release by the London-based advocacy group Free Tibet is testament to the ever-tightening cordon imposed by the Chinese Communist Party on ethnic Tibetan regions where the self-immolations have occurred.

Free Tibet said in a statement that after Lobsang Namgyal's self-immolation, his younger brother was detained, his family members were followed and their telephones were placed under surveillance.

"China employs brutal repression, propaganda and bribery to no avail: protest and resistance will continue as long as the Tibetan people are denied their freedom," said the organization's director, Stephanie Brigden.

A second prominent Tibetan rights group, the Washington-based International Campaign for Tibet, attributed the news of Lobsang Namgyal's self-immolation to reports from Tibetan monks living in exile.

Chinese Communist Party officials maintain that the campaign of self-immolations is being coordinated by those close to the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, who fled to India after a failed uprising in 1959. The state media has announced a series of recent court cases in which ethnic Tibetans were sent to prison for allegedly inciting self-immolations and their "efforts to spread ideas" about Tibetan independence.

Those cases, and other state media reporting, assert that a conspiracy was hatched by the "Dalai Lama clique" to attempt to destabilize ethnic Tibetan areas in China by encouraging the self-immolations.

But residents interviewed in those regions say that the protests are borne from deep frustration with an authoritarian regime that they fear is working to eradicate or undermine their language, customs and religious practices.

The self-immolations began in February 2009 in a Tibetan enclave of China's western Sichuan Province, where Lobsang Namgyal also reportedly set himself aflame. They soon spread to three adjoining areas: the provinces of Qinghai and Gansu, and Tibet itself, which is tightly controlled by Beijing and known formally as the Tibet Autonomous Region.

All but that first one in 2009 have occurred since a 20-year-old monk named Phuntsog – many Tibetans have just one name – set himself ablaze on March 16, 2011, apparently to mark the third-anniversary of protests near his Kirti Monastery in the town of Aba. Tibetan advocacy groups assert that during those 2008 protests, part of wider unrest that swept across the Tibetan Plateau at the time, Chinese security forces killed at least 10 people.

More than 80 of those who've self-immolated are said to have died.

Both of the Tibetan advocacy groups who released information about the latest self-immolation said that Lobsang Namgyal had been a monk at Kirti Monastery when he disappeared last September, reportedly into police custody for some two weeks. The Free Tibet group said that he had left the monastery after resurfacing, allegedly due to threats by police.

"Lobsang Namgyal had been so distressed that he had left for a rural nomadic area away from the monastery, but still he had been under intense surveillance," according to a post on the International Campaign for Tibet's website.

"Before his death on February 3, he had returned to Kirti monastery and told some Tibetans that he wanted to go away on a religious retreat," said the International Campaign for Tibet statement. "A few days later, he set himself on fire."

BEIJING: 100th Tibetan self-immolation reported in a protest China can’t stop | World | Tri-CityHerald.com

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The issue is simple.

China functions on having harmony and stability as their core policy.

To do so, it cannot harbour a variety of ethnicity that want to maintain their roots and their heritage.

They want all to have one history and one ethnicity and one heritage, namely Han, so that the aspirations are One.

Tibetans don't want to subject themselves to this age old historical policy of making all people in China to embrace being Han with the same history, heritage, culture, language et al and thereby wiping away all traces of their roots and singular identity.

There lies the conflict.

Both sides are not ready to give any leeway.

Unfortunately for China, another set of people too are not ready to become Han and they are the Uighurs, who are Moslem.

China has to resolve this issue for their own harmony, stability and tranquility.

One wonders how China will achieve this.
 

W.G.Ewald

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Re: 100th Tibetan self-immolation reported in a protest China can't st

If Infitada suicide bombings had no permanent effect, will self-immolations in Tibet change anything?
 

roma

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Re: 100th Tibetan self-immolation reported in a protest China can't st

compare and contrast with good-ole pak supported Talebs - small number ( relatively of course ) brought the mighty soviet union down - at the right point in the econ cycle , in the right way - the 100 tibetans unnecessarily lost here could have been put to much better use - time for the tibetan ppl to get really serious and get a different bunch of leaders - much as we all respect Dallai ........ ( btw same applies to the east -turkestanis too - the uyghurs )
 

no smoking

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Re: 100th Tibetan self-immolation reported in a protest China can't st

If Infitada suicide bombings had no permanent effect, will self-immolations in Tibet change anything?
After all, they havt to try.
Dalai is aging, no one knows when his time comes. There is one thing for sure, after his death, exile Tibet gov will lost most of their international influence. The only option they have will be: terrorism that is battle they can't win.
 

Coalmine

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Re: 100th Tibetan self-immolation reported in a protest China can't st

China speaks with forked tongue

China speaks with forked tongue | Niti Central

'Esteemed monks: Tibetan religious policy better than ever', said a recent title on China Tibet Online, an official website of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).

It quotes the 16-year-old Reting Rinpoche who said, "The religious policies in Tibet are very good," adding that he would "devote himself to the religious cultivation and improving Buddhist attainments to contribute to the social stability". 'Social stability' is a euphemism for the continuance of the rule of the Party.

Dechen Wangmo, chief of religious affairs of Tibet's CPP Consultative Conference explained that age is not a problem in becoming a 'political advisor', "Living Buddhas [the term used by the Communists for the reincarnated lamas] like Reting Rinpoche enjoy a very high prestige among Tibetan people and they have always been role models for patriotism."

These new 'advisors' are Party-lovers wearing the burgundy monk's garb. Sonam Puntshok, the China-selected 7th Reting Rinpoche is one of them. Xinhua has to remind the faithful that the Reting Rinpoches played an important place in Tibetan history.

Without going into the devious personality of the 5th Reting, who occupied the regency in Tibet till 1941, it is enough to say that he was closely linked to the Kuomintang and was at the centre of a quasi-civil war in Tibet in 1947; the present seventh 'incarnation' is a pure production of the Chinese Propaganda Department, without any formal recognition from the Dalai Lama or any other serious spiritual leader.

In recent weeks, religion seems to have become essential for a Party which once thought it was poison.

For example, Khenpo Karchen Lobsang Phuntsok, the oldest religious deputy at Tibet's CCPCP invited his countrymen "to practice Buddhist cultivation with the love for the State and the religion."

Beijing's regime has recently started appointing pliable 'political advisors' in Tibet.

Other shadowy characters such as Dinga Rinpoche Pasang Namgyal from Tohlung Dechen County have been elevated to the same rank. Dinga quotes the Buddha as saying "do all that is good" — he probably means 'good for the Party'.

One Gyatso Ling Rinpoche Thubten Drapa, also a 'political advisor', announced that "all lives are equal; the Buddha is also asking people to respect their own lives." It is clearly propaganda to control the desperate local population, most of the time not fooled by these gimmicks.

Ironically, the Panchen Lama, the second highest Lama in Tibet whose reincarnation was recognised by the Dalai Lama, is under house arrest for the past 18 years.

But the local population is not fooled by Beijing's propaganda and the resentment against the Chinese is increasing by the day.

Yu Zhengsheng, a newly-elected member of the Standing Committee of the Politburo (and number 4 in the Party), who will soon take over the chairmanship of Central Working Coordination Small Group on Tibet, has already started overlooking the activities of the Roof of the World. His recent visit to Tibetan areas of Sichuan (where he had several photo-opportunities with local Tibetans) seems to confirm the transfer of power. But if the face is new, his first words are not.

During his inspection tour, Yu declared, "The fight against the Dalai Lama clique should continue in order to create a favorable social and political environment for economic development and the improvement of people's well-being."

However, more recently during a meeting with major religious groups in Beijing, Yu spoke of religion as a 'positive force'.

He particularly mentioned the usefulness of religion in promoting economic and social development. He said, "Efforts are needed to make religion conducive to national development and the improvement of religious adherents' material and spiritual lives".

Are Yu's latest utterances heralding a change in Beijing's policy vis-à-vis the Buddhist region? It is doubtful as discrimination against the Tibetans still remains strong, forcing young Tibetans to self-immolate.

But it appears that the Party has decided to play the religion card to solve the Tibet issue. Beijing has appointed the largest ever number of clerics in the CCPCC, the region's political advisory body. This year, some 115 seats have been reserved for monks, 18.7 per cent of the total 615 seats, a raise of 121 per cent from the previous Conference.

Ironically, two years ago, the Dalai Lama announced that he wanted to delink his political and spiritual duties. He handed over his responsibilities to an elected leader.

The Chinese Communists are going in the opposite direction, they now believe in religion, they love religion"¦ but for their own purpose.

The Dalai Lama is right, in a modern state, it is not good to mix religion and politics"¦ and democracy is still the best system.
 

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