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Affichage des articles dont le libellé est uprising. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est uprising. Afficher tous les articles

mercredi 16 mars 2011

Young Monk Self-Immolation Sparks Protest in Tibet

Dharamshala: A young Tibetan monk by the name of Phuntsok has been killed after setting himself on fire in Sichuan province (Amdo) in protest against the recent Chinese crackdown on Tibetan dissent and personal freedoms, igniting a major street protest against police in the main market.

According to Kate Saunders of the London-based International Campaign for Tibet, the 21-year-old monk from Kirti monastery in Ngaba "immolated himself in protest against the crackdown". Zorgyi, a researcher for the organisation, added that "We've also received widespread information about a protest with nearly 1,000 monks and lay people that came after."

Witnesses claim the fire was extinguished and Phuntsok was beaten by police until his death moments later, and that he could be heard shouting slogans about freedom right up until the end.

Hundreds of Tibetans are said to have been arrested following the angry protest with many suffering injuries caused by electric batons and iron rods used by Chinese soldiers, mirroring the uprising that took place all across Tibet just prior to the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, which also marked the anniversary of Tibetan National Uprising Day (March 10, 1959).

On this occasion in Lhasa, mass demonstrations occurred in the Tibetan capital involving thousands of people and were brutally crushed by Chinese armed forces. At least 19 people, mostly Han Chinese, were killed during the uprising after it turned violent. It is estimated that over 200 Tibetans were subsequently killed in the crackdown that followed.

Tibetan National Uprising Day is commemorated every year in memory of those who were beaten and killed in the 1959 Uprising against authoritarian rule by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), who led a deadly invasion of Tibet with its "Liberation Army" in 1949, sending many Tibetans into exile.

The area where the protest took place has now been placed under even tighter security by the police force and military, who are a constant presence in Tibet and areas of Sichuan province with large ethnic Tibetan populations. 

Chinese police and government offices in Ngaba were not answering repeated phone calls from the press after the incident, with the exception of one respondant who said "nothing is wrong".

 
2008 Protests in Lhasa, Tibet

mardi 15 mars 2011

Tibetan Women's National Uprising Commemorated in Exile

Dharamshala: Sataurday, March 12, many Tibetan women of the Dharamshala Exile community in India gathered at the main temple to commemorate the 52nd anniversary of the 1959 Women's Uprising in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet.
 
During the ceremony a minute's silence was observed to honour those women who were beaten, tortured and degraded by the Chinese government as they peacefully voiced their opposition to Chinese oppression in Tibet's capital, and in particular those who gave their lives to the cause.
The event was held by the Tibetan Women's Association (TWA) and featured speeches from prominent women in the community, and also served as the release for Jamyang Kyi's book 'A Sequence of Tortures: A Diary of Interrogations' on the demonstrations that swept the three provinces of Tibet in 2008.

It was the second time this week that the Tibetan community has commemorated the 1959 uprisings, following Thursday's National Tibetan Uprising Day ceremony and rally which saw a turn out of several thousand Tibetans march from the main temple down to Lower Dharamshala, after an important speech made by His Holiness the Dalai Lama.

Tibetans and supporters have rallied in cities all over the world this week to commemorate the March 10 and 12 anniversaries and show their unwavering conviction and demands for greater freedom in Tibet.

In New Delhi- On the occasion of the 52nd anniversary of the National Tibetan Women’s Uprising Day, the TWA group dedicated this day to Tibetan women in literature, organising an exclusive literary event, “Honouring the Literary Spirit of Tibetan Women Inside Tibet”. The event was held at the Deputy Speaker Hall of the Constitution Club of India, and featured a book launch and a panel discussion.

"Post 2008 national protests inside Tibet, the world is witnessing a cultural and intellectual renaissance in Tibet where intellectuals, thinkers and artists are reasserting their Tibetan identity and patriotism in a creative way. Tibetan Women like Tsering Woeser and Jamyang Kyi have written fiercely under oppression and their works have contributed largely to amplifying the suppressed voices in Tibet," said a report released by the women's group.