Tibet “neither seeks separation nor high degree of autonomy”: Kashag Statement Vol. 03, Issue 100, Print Issue 24, 15 December 2013 US asks China to engage in dialogue with Dalai Lama
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Non-violent action is related to warm-heartedness: Tibet’s spiritual leader His Holiness the Dalai Lama By Kathryn Middel - Katzenmeyer: 02 December 2013
Mr Gary Locke, the U.S. ambassador to China. Photo: Media file
By Yeshe Choesang: 13 December 2013
Dharamshala: - The US Ambassador to China, Mr Gary Locke, urged the Chinese leadership to engage in constructive dialogue with His Holiness the Dalai Lama or his representatives to resolve tensions in Tibet. “As Ambassador, I have witnessed China’s rich diversity first hand. I have also seen cases where heavy-handed policies deny basic freedoms to ethnic and religious minorities, including ethnic Uighurs, Tibetans and Mongolians, undermining the trust that binds diverse societies,” Mr Gary Locke said in a statement issued on 10 December, the International Human Rights Day. “The United States calls on the Chinese government to protect the fundamental freedoms of all its citizens without discrimination. We also urge China’s leaders to engage in constructive dialogue with the Dalai Lama or his representatives, as a means to reduce the tensions,” he said. The ambassador welcomed China’s recent decisions to end the re-education through labour system and to strengthen the rule of law. He expressed hopes that China’s leaders will soon bring substance to the notion that certain inalienable rights pertain to all citizens.
Tibetan speaker meets Minnesota Rights Commissioner
Dharamshala: - The Birla Institute of Management Technology (BIMTECH) invited His Holiness the Dalai Lama to address a select gathering of corporate leaders, civil servants, academicians, professionals, and diplomats today as part of its 25th anniversary celebrations. “It’s a great honour for me to have this opportunity to share my views and experiences with brothers and sisters like you,” His Holiness said. “I consider myself to be just another human being with not much difference between us. I remember it was perhaps 20th April 1959 that I reached Birla House in Mussoorie after several days journey by train. Soon afterwards, Pandit Nehru came to see me,” he said. “I met him for the first time in Peking in 1954, then again at the time of the Buddha Jayanti celebrations in 1956. By then there was already trouble in Tibet and I told him I was thinking of not going back. He advised me that it would be better to go back and to try to manage the situation on the basis of the 17 point agreement,” he added. “It’s been nearly 55 years since I came to stay at Birla House. I lost my home and found a new one in India, a country I’d always felt close to because of my studies. The Government of India took care of us. I am a refugee, but I’m also the longest staying guest of the Indian government. As a result of India’s help and the freedom I’ve enjoyed here, I’ve learned many things; among them the ancient Indian concept of ahimsa or non-violence.” His Holiness went on to say that “peaceful, non-violent action is related to warm-heartedness, which is something we need to promote on the basis of secularism. Because India is a multireligious society, the freedom fighters decided there should be a secular constitution. It wouldn’t work to impose one religion or another, whereas secularism, from the Indian point of view, is
His Holiness the Dalai Lama at the Birla Institute in Noida, India on December 1, 2013. Photo/Tenzin Choejor/OHHDL
respectful of all religions and even of the right to be agnostic.” He said we need to reflect on our common experience: our birth from our mothers and the affection with which she cared for us, give us the ability to be affectionate to others. “Nobody wants problems, but we create them. They spring
Another Tibetan sets himself on fire in Tibet, Toll reaches 123
directly from our self-centred attitude. The opposite of this, compassion and concern for others is the key factor in the creation of a more peaceful world. If we base our compassion on religious faith, there’ll be limits to it. If, instead, we take a secular approach, there are no limits to what we might achieve.”
Kalons meet leaders in Europe on Human Rights Day
Kalon Dolma Gyari in Torino with President Mr Valerio Cattaneo of the Regional Council of Piemonte Region Mr Gianpiero Leo President of the Regional Association for Human Rights and Tibet accompanied by Mr Bruno Mellano and Mrs Rosanna Dagiovani. Photo: CTA
Speaker Penpa Tsering with Mr Kevin Lindsay, Commissioner of Minnesota Department of Human Rights. Photo: CTA/DIIR
By Jake Thomas: 28 November 2013
By Jake Thomas: 13 December 2013.
Dharamshala: - Tibetans and supporters of the just cause of Tibet around the world on 10 December celebrated the 24th anniversary of the conferment of Nobel peace prize on His Holiness the Dalai Lama and observed the World Human Rights Day. According to CTA, Four Kalons of the Central Tibetan Administration attended the celebrations with members of the Tibetan communities and supporters in different parts of Europe. P- 7......
Dharamshala: - Speaker Penpa Tsering of the Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile met Mr Kevin Lindsay, Commissioner of Minnesota Department of Human Rights and members of the Tibetan community in Chicago and Madison from 6 -10 December. He was in Minnesota at the invitation of the Tibetan American Foundation of Minnesota (TAFM). P- 7......
Tibetan Students’ silent protest in Dharamshala
Chinese Embassy “intimidated” by candlelight vigil
Konchok Tseten, a 30-year old Tibetan nomad set himself on fire on Tuesday, December 3, 2013, in Machu County, north-eastern Tibet. Photo: TPI
By Yeshe Choesang: 04 December 2013
Candlelit vigil outside Chinese Embassy, London to mark Human Rights Day, 10 December 2013. Photo: TPI
By Paul Golding: 13 December 2013.
London: - Chinese officials in London said they felt “intimidated” by activists holding a candlelit vigil outside the Chinese Embassy to mark Human Rights Day on 10 December. The Embassy refused to accept a giant postcard calling on the Chinese government to make immediate reforms to improve the human rights for all its citizens. The vigil was held to remember all human rights defenders and prisoners of conscience who sacrificed their freedom and lives in order to promote and protect the human rights of those living under the Chinese Communist Party’s regime in East Turkestan, Tibet and across China. P- 7......
Dharamshala: - Emerging reports coming out of Tibet say a Tibetan from Machu county set himself ablaze in Ngaba County North-eastern Tibet on Tuesday, December 3, in protest against Chinese repressive rule in Tibet. “Konchok Tseten, a 30-year old Tibetan nomad set himself on fire yesterday 5pm ( local time) inAmdo Machu county, North-eastern Tibet,” Lhamo Kyab, a Tibetan living in exile told The Tibet Post International. “Some local Tibetans in Meruma village in Ngaba County who witnessed the fiery protest told me that the Tibetan man from Machu county has suffered severe burn injuries,” Lhamo Kyab told TPI News, adding that he has most likely not survived the self-immolation. “Chinese police and security forces immediately arrived at the spot to take the self-immolator into their custody, Sources said. Authorities tried to take him away but local Tibetans prevented them.The police took away the self-immolator after arresting several Tibetans, including his wife and relatives,” sources added. The exile source with contacts in the region said that “all the shops and restaurants remained closed today and Chinese police are confiscating the mobile phones of the residents in the areas as they stepped up a security crackdown following the latest self-immolation protest against Beijing’s rule”. Sources said “Konchok had told a relative this summer that he would set himself on fire one day to protest against the Chinese repressive
rule. The relative advised him not to take his own life.” He is survived by his wife Namnang and two sons- Chakdor Kyab, 4 and Patsal Kyab, 3. “Tibetans inside Tibet are living under heavy repression. There is a total clampdown on any conventional means to express their grievances. These conditions have led to the growing number of selfimmolations inside Tibet. We implore Chinese leadership to address the grievances of Tibetans immediately,” Mr Tashi Phuntsok, who is the Secretary for Information and International Relations of the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) said on Wednesday evening. Konchok Tseten is from Delek Ruchen Village in Chakgawa Township, Machu county in Gansu province’s Kanlho. His father’s name is Samkho and his mother’s name is Oga. The burning protest by Tseten brought to 123, the verified number of self-immolations since the wave of burnings began in 2009 in protest against Chinese repressive rule and of them 105 were reportedly passed-away from their severe burn injuries. The Tibetan self-immolators called for freedom for Tibetan people and the return of Tibetan spiritual leader His Holiness the Dalai Lama to Tibet. The CTA has consistently appealed to and discouraged Tibetans from drastic action, including self-immolation, as a form of protest. The blame as well as the solution for the self-immolations lies with the Chinese government.
T.T.S. Students offering prayers for self-immolators, Dharamshala, India, on 13 December, 2013. Photo: TPI By Choneyi Sangpo: 13 December 2013
Dharamshala: - Over 250 students of the Tibetan Transit School (T.T.S.) held a rally in Dharamshala in solidarity with the Tibetans inside Tibet and 123 Tibetans who have set themselves ablaze in protest against Chinese repressive policies in Tibet. The students finally gathered in front of the Martyrs Memorial near the main Tibetan temple after walking 8 KM from the school, chanting prayers and carrying pictures of the self-immolators. They demanded that China must consider allowing the Dalai Lama to return his homeland, and called a reunion of all Tibetans both inside and outside of Tibet. They also urged China to release Gedhun Choekyi Nyima immediately. Many students recited their poems dedicated to Tibetans self immolators. A candlelight vigil marked the end of the day-long silent protest.