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Cries against injustice mar journalists' Tibet tour

by Ethan Cole
Posted: Friday, March 28, 2008, 7:50 (GMT)
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Cries against injustice mar journalists' Tibet tour
A Tibetan activist sits in protest amidst riot policemen outside the visa section of the Chinese embassy in Kathmandu March 27, 2008. Nearly a dozen Tibetan refugees and supporters, yelling "Free...
(REUTERS/Gopal Chitrakar)

A group of Tibetan monks shouted in tears over the lack of religious freedom in their nation as foreign reporters passed by on an official tour of Tibet’s capital Wednesday.

Shattering China’s carefully orchestrated plan to show Lhasa was at peace after the recent deadly anti-China riots, the monks interrupted the government-approved reporters’ tour of Jokhang Temple – one of Tibet’s holiest shrines – claiming that Tibet is not free and that the Chinese Government was lying about the real situation in Tibet.

One monk said that some of the monks in the temple talking to journalists were “not true believers but …Communist Party members”, according to The Associated Press, whose reporter was among those on the tour.

"They are all officials, they (the government) arranged for them to come in. And we aren't allowed to go out because they say we could destroy things but we never did anything," another monk said.

The group of some 30 monks also denied China’s accusation that the Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual and secular leader of Tibet, was the mastermind behind recent protests and riots.

Earlier this month, a large anti-government protest fired up in Lhasa, marking the worst anti-China demonstration in nearly two decades. The protest in Lhasa sparked demonstrations in Tibetan areas across western China.

The Chinese Government has claimed a death toll of only 22 after the demonstrations, but Tibetan exiles say the violence has left nearly 140 people dead, according to AP.

A Foreign Ministry spokesman, following the disruption by the monks, insisted that Tibetans have full rights. Since foreign reporters are rarely allowed into Tibet, the media tour is largely viewed as a publicity stunt by China to quell bad feelings ahead of the Beijing Olympics in August.

The international community has widely condemned China’s suppression of free speech and several European leaders have vowed to boycott the Olympics.

Meanwhile, the Dalai Lama has been seeking a direct dialogue with China, saying that he does not seek for Tibet to be separate but only autonomous.

US President Bush spoke with Chinese President Hu Jintao Thursday and encouraged the Chinese Government to hold direct talks with the Dalai Lama.

In the telephone call, Bush "pushed very hard" about violence in Tibet and used the call to "speak very clearly and frankly", the White House said Thursday, according to AP.

Whilst also rebuking China for its treatment of Tibetans, Dr Carl Moeller, president and CEO of the Christian ministry Open Doors USA, said one day prior that there is an equally urgent need to address the issue of religious freedom and persecution.

“[I]t is important when we consider larger questions on human rights and issues of political freedom that we also deal with Christian persecution and religious freedom issues that must be addressed in the same context,” Moeller told The Christian Post.

“China has been treating its unregistered Christian population harshly in many corners of the country for decades,” he said as an example.

China is ranked the No 10 worst persecutor of Christians on Open Doors’ 2008 World Watch List.



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Added: Thursday, April 3, 2008, 7:13 (BST)

Zhao Ziyang and Hu Yaobang were Chinese Communist party leaders who wanted freedom for all citizens of China-including the Tibetans, and the people who demonstrated in Tianenmen Square and who were killed or jailed for it. They were kicked out of their leadership roles by the hardliners, kept incommunicado, and placed under house arrest for the remainder of their lives.

The Olympic torch was lit recently in China, but it isn't the torch the Chinese people wanted. Their torch was held aloft by their statue of the Goddess of Liberty, the one that they built. That torch was torn down, and the people were attacked and killed or jailed by the "People's" army in Tiananmen square in 1989.

Young adults in China today know nothing of this, because the Chinese government propaganda machine has vilified the hundred thousand patriots who demonstrated for freedom that day, and dismissed them as a few anti-social hooligans. This process is, of course, taking place today in China, only it is currently directed against the Tibetan demonstrators and the Dalai Lama. If the Tiananmen Square demonstrators had been successful in reforming the Chinese government, I doubt if there would have been the demonstrations in Tibet, because the people of Tibet would probably have had far fewer grievances.
Google: Wikipedia Tiananmen Square Massacre

Now the Chinese government, run by the very same people who conducted the Tiananmen Square Massacre and then lied about it, asks us to believe that the pacifistic Buddhist monks of Tibet are preparing to become suicide bombers.

Tim Dunn, Arlington WA USA

Kevin Mayhew Publishers
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