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2013: Tibetan courage in the face of repression


2013: Tibetan courage in the face of repression

Tuesday, 24 December 2013
Tibetan man and military forces at religious festival, Rebkong 2013
China's rule opposed inside Tibet as Free Tibet campaigns make impact outside Tibet
Tibet has been occupied by China for more than sixty years.
Although 2013 has seen the Chinese government attempt to tighten its grip on Tibet, Tibetans still refuse to bow to China's force.

Shootings, beatings, mass arrests and deaths in custody

Hundreds of Tibetans have been arrested and jailed for acts China sees as threatening this year. Many Tibetans have faced brutal violence.
In July, a gathering of Tibetans celebrating the birthday of the Dalai Lama was fired on by security forces
In September and October, Tibetans protesting against being forced to fly the Chinese flags on their homes were shot by security forces while seeking the release of arrested villagers. More than sixty protesters were injured in the incident.
At least three Tibetans were killed in jail in 2013. Many others reported torture.
A report this year by a US government commission found suppression of Tibetan Buddhism at a “ten year high”.

Tibetan resistance continues

Mine protest May 2013 5.JPGDespite the brutality, Tibetans have never stopped standing up for their nation, their land and their fellow Tibetans.
Again and again they have protested environmental destruction unemployment and China's repression.
Tibetans have also braved the wrath of the Chinese state by sharing information about human rights abuses and protests with Free Tibet and the world outside Tibet, overcoming China’s ban on foreign media and independent human rights organisations. If convicted of transmitting information outside Tibet, they could face years in prison.
In 2012, more than 80 Tibetans set themselves alight in protest against China’s occupation. Most died. 2013 has seen far fewer such protests – 27 were confirmed – but they have continued into December, despitesevere sentences for anyone accused of any involvement in organising or spreading news about them.
See our interactive map of Tibetan resistance and timeline of protests for more information.

Free Tibet in action

Free Tibet has brought news of repression and resistance to the world’s media in 2013, with our information featured in the New York Times, BBC, Guardian, CNN and countless other news outlets.
Eleanor Sonam 2 use.jpg
Our campaigns have helped keep Tibet's plight in the public eye. When UK Prime Minister David Cameron visited China in December, a Free Tibet opinion poll showed that the majority of British people wanted him to raise Tibet on his visit and made headlines in the national media.
Earlier this year, the United Nations took up Free Tibet's concerns about the treatment of children in Tibet after we and our research partner Tibet Watch gave evidence to a UN committee.

New campaigns for Tibet

DSC_0998.JPGInterContinental Hotels Group’s plan to open a luxury hotel in Lhasa in 2014 is just what China wants.
When Intercontinental sells the image of a happy, peaceful Tibet to the world while ignoring human rights abuses anddismissing the concerns of Tibet campaigners it is effectively colluding with the Chinese occupation.
The company has quickly learned that Tibet campaigners will not stand by and ignore its cynical deal.
From blocking the entrance to Intercontinental's London Westminster hotel with a bed to demonstrationsacross the world, the campaign against Intercontinental continues to grow.
ft-jailed-musicians-logo.jpgIn December, we also launched our campaign to free nine musicians imprisoned in 2012 and 2013. Attracting the support of major music stars, our petition calling for their release has already received more than 1,000 signatures.

China shuts down Drongna monastery in Driru, arrests teacher

China shuts down Drongna monastery in Driru, arrests teacher
Phayul[Tuesday, December 31, 2013 19:11]
DHARAMSHALA, December 31 : Chinese authorities in Tibet's Driru County have shut down Drongna monastery, a Tibetan source told Phayul. The monastery's debate master Kalsang Dhondup has been arrested on November 11, 2013.

Rabten monastery and Drongna monastery were surrounded by Chinese armed personnel when news about crackdown in Tarmoe monastery came out earlier this month.

Eight monks of Rabten monastery who had gone to study in monastery and institutions in Palyul, Sershul and Serta were detained earlier.

In March this year, several monasteries in Tibet have been forced to hand over their administration to communist party cadres while some monasteries faced a complete shut down due to boycott by monks following increased repression and control by Chinese government authorities. Alarmed by the closure of monasteries and the absence of monks to perform rituals, local Tibetans in the region had carried their protest to government officials and in one instance, even left a dead body at a government building, complaining that there were no monks to perform the last rituals.

Chinese government considers Driru as one of the most restive regions brewing anti government sentiments and activities in the Tibet Autonomous Region, according to a source. "They fear that instability in Diru could cause ripple effect in other areas in the TAR. Therefore, they have been engaged in forcing Tibetans in Driru to rigorous 'Thought Education Campaign' since September," another source had told phayul earlier this month


Tibetan exiles ask WHO to stop politicizing public health

Tibetan exiles ask WHO to stop politicizing public health
Phayul[Tuesday, December 31, 2013 11:54]
A TB patient at the isolation ward under Delek Hospital's TB program/file
A TB patient at the isolation ward under Delek Hospital's TB program/file
DHARAMSHALA, December 31: Tibetan activists have asked World Health Organization to keep politics away from public health. The appeal comes in the wake of a recent decision by the WHO to deny an award to a Tibetan hospital under pressure from China.

Jigme shows the WHO acknowledgement letter, WHO regional office, Washington DC/Jan. 30/2013
Jigme shows the WHO acknowledgement letter, WHO regional office, Washington DC/Jan. 30/2013
Minneapolis based Tibetan activist, Jigme Ugen, was stopped outside the Pan American Health Organization, WHO regional office for the Americas, where he had gone to submit a petition signed by 1600 people. After several hours of negotiation, he was finally allowed to meet with a senior member who agreed to accept the petition on behalf of Dr. Margaret Chan, director-general of the WHO, who incidentally is a Chinese national. Jigme was handed a letter acknowledging the receipt of the petition.

The theme for the 2013 Kochon Prize is 'TB in conflict and refugee areas.' "As refugees who escaped political and religious oppression at home, Tibetans in exile fit the category perfectly,” said Jigme Ugen, who is also the president of the Tibetan National Congress. “There is no organization more fit to receive this award than the Delek Hospital which has saved hundreds of lives in the Tibetan refugee community and the local Indian community. The WHO must stop holding public health hostage to politics.”

The Stop-TB Partnership chose the Delek Hospital, a pioneer hospital managed by Tibetan exiles in India, for the 2013 Kochon Prize that also carries $65,000 cash award. The award required approval from the Director General of WHO, Margaret Chan. However, days before the award was to be presented to Dr. Tseten Sadutsang, Chinese diplomats had reportedly stormed into the offices of Stop-TB Partnership objecting the decision.

“I was shocked to find out how the Chinese government flexes its political muscle deep within the seemingly apolitical World Health Organization,” said Dr. Kunchok Dorjee, who directed the Tibetan TB program at Delek Hospital.

Mark Harrington of the Treatment Action Group said to the Wall Street Journal, "It's a violation of the mission of the prize to deny an award to a program that is saving the lives of a huge number of poor people."

Despite high rates of TB and drug-resistant TB in the community, the program says 93% of its patients in 2012 were either confirmed cured or were well after their treatment ended. The hospital’s TB program currently has about 300 people under treatment. It gets about 200 new cases a year, about 14% of whom have drug-resistant forms of the disease, including some that require lengthy doses of expensive medications.

 
 
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