The Tibet Post International e-Newspaper

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“Tibet’s problem is India’s problem”, the long-standing issue need to be resolved but not by force, says His Holiness P-3 .....

Vol. 03, Issue 117, Print Issue 41, 30 September 2014 China Jails Tibetan monk who shouted Tibet’s independence

I n t e r n a t i o n a l

B o d - K y i - Cha-Trin

A Voice For Tibet

Ngodup Tsering appointed as the minister of the Education Department, Central Tibetan Administration Bi-monthly

P-6 .... www.thetibetpost.com

Rs.10

friendship must be based on trust: His Holiness the Dalai Lama By Yeshe Choesang: 26 September 2014

Undated image of Ven Lobsang Gedun, from Drongsar Monastery, Dhakshang village, Tsawa Pashoe county, Kham region of eastern Tibet. Photo: TPI By Yeshe Choesang: 18 September 2014

Dharamshala: - Sources coming out of Tibet say a Chinese court in the Tibet Autonomous Region has sentenced a Tibetan monk to a ten year prison term over shouting slogans “Tibet is an independent country” and “Long live His Holiness the Dalai Lama.” “Ven Lobsang Gedun, 21, was sentenced previous week after being held in a detention center in Chamdho, Kham region of eastern Tibet for more than a year,” sources said, adding “it is sad that he was not allowed to meet his family members.” “He was beaten and tortured while in Chinese police custody and the condition of his health is unknown,” Gyatso an exiled Tibetan currently living in India told The Tibet International (TPI) quoting local Tibetans. TPI has earlier reported on the Chinese police arrest of Gedun, a monk of Dzongsar Monastery from Tsawa Pashoe County, Kham Province of Eastern Tibet. “On 1 July, 2013, Gedun rose in the middle of the recital of the Chinese National Anthem during an event of the Founding P-5..... Anniversary of the Chinese Communist Solidarity vigils held for Tibetan self-immolator Lhamo Tashi

New Delhi, India, 22 September 2014: - Describing himself just one human being among 7 billion others, the spiritual leader of Tibet His Holiness the Dalai Lama said friendship must be based on ‘trust, honesty and openness’, while also decreasing ways of thinking in terms of ‘us’ and ‘them.’ Monday morning, His Holiness the Dalai Lama was invited to speak at the Indian Habitat Centre by Rajeev Chandrasekhar MP and the Ashoka University. Mr Chandrasekhar is an independent member of the Rajya Sabha, the upper house of the Indian Parliament, representing Karnataka and Bangalore. The Ashoka University is a fully residential university whose founders believe that education should be holistic and liberal. In his introduction Mr Chandrasekhar praised His Holiness as someone who espouses peace and co-existence. “Dear brothers and sisters,” His Holiness began, “that is what we all are, 7 billion human beings, brothers and sisters, each born from a mother and surviving in dependence on each other. In the past people were self-sufficient and able to live in isolated communities, but today we are much more interdependent. Climate change and the functioning of the global economy present challenges that affect us all, which we have to face together. “Thinking in terms of ‘us’ and ‘them’ is therefore very unhelpful. I consider myself to be just one human being among 7 billion others. If I think of myself as different from others or as something special it creates a barrier between us. We all want to lead happy lives, to gather friends around us and friendship is based on trust, honesty and openness. This is another aspect of the oneness of human beings. If we defeat others, we too are harmed; if others are successful, we too benefit.” He spoke of how religious traditions outline different approaches to the same goal. Theistic traditions believe in god the creator, while non-theistic traditions, like some of the Samkhyas, Jains and Buddhists believe in self-creation. Although Samkhyas and Jains

Holiness the Dalai Lama at the Indian Habitat Centre in New Delhi, India on September 22, 2014, during a meeting titled ‘one world, one vision, one future’. Photo/ Tenzin Choejor/OHHDL

believe in a self independent of the body and mind, Buddhists say there is no such self. He clarified that this is not to say that self does not exist at all, but that it exists in dependence on other factors. His Holiness mentioned that while some say the best way to serve god is to serve others, it is also evident that to help others rather than harming them, treating them with love and compassion leads to lasting trust and friendship. Friends attracted to the rich and powerful,

Tibetan man set himself on fire in protest at Chinese rule in Tibet

however, tend to be only short term friends of wealth and power. In answering questions from the audience, His Holiness explained that Tibetan Buddhism preserves the traditions of Nalanda University, that the Tibetan language is the most accurate means of expressing that profound knowledge. He mentioned that in terms of the past, the writings of Nalanda masters such as Nagarjuna are what have impressed him most. P-3.....

Xi’s visit with banners hang at Taj ‘Xi: Free Tibet Now’

Tibetans and supporters in Dharamshala and Delhi hold candle light vigil to express solidarity with self-Immolators and their familiess in Tibet, on 21 September, 2014. Photo: TPI By Yeshe Choesang: 22 September 2014 Thursday morning at 10 am, four Tibetan activists of Students for a Free Tibet-India (SFT-India) unfurled two big 16 x 5 feet banners from a tall electrical pole and a metro construction pillar just 50 metres away from the Taj Palace Hotel where the Chinese President Xi Jinping is residing during his two day visit to New Delhi. Photo: TPI

Dharamshala: - Exiled Tibetans in McLeodganj and Majnu ka tilla held candle light vigil on Sunday (September 21) to express solidarity with self-immolators and protested. Lhamo Tashi, a 22-year old Tibetan youth, set himself on fire on September 17 (Wednesday) in Tsoe County in Amdho region of north-eastern Tibet protesting China’s hard line policies in Tibet. Rtyc Delhi organised a candle light vigil for Lhamo Tashi. The march was joined by TibetanYouth Congress members, Rtwa Delhi Samyeling members ,Rtyc Rohini students and local residents of Majnu ka tilla. P-4.....

By Yeshe Choesang: 18 September 2014

Tibetan and Indian activists protest ahead of Xi Jinping’s Visit

Undated photo of Lhamo Tashi, a 22-year old Tibetan student who reportedly died after setting himself abaze in Tsoe County, Amdho region of northeastern Tibet. Photo: TPI By Yeshe Choesang: 22 September 2014

On 15 September, 2014, Tibetan and Indian activists protesting at India Gate in New Delhi, India ahead of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s Visit to India. Photo: TPI By Jane Cook: 15 September 2014

September 15, New Delhi: - Tibetan and Indian members of Students for a Free Tibet-India did a photo action this afternoon in front of India Gate, displaying a banner reading ‘Tibet’s Independence, India’s Security’. The 7 activists also displayed the Indian tricolour and the Tibetan national flag. This photo-action was carried out in protest of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s maiden visit to India later this week. SFT-India submitted a petition to Prime Minister Modi’s office in South Block this morning. The petition was launched on Change.org and received over 4000 signatures urging PM Modi to talk about the crisis in Tibet with Xi Jinping, and simultaneously secure India’s interests by P-5..... holding a strong ground in front of China.

Dharamshala: - Sources coming out of Tibet says a Tibetan youth died after setting himself alight in Tsoe County, an area in North-Eastern Tibet, in an apparent protest against the Chinese government rule and repressive policies in the region. The man, identified as Lhamo Tashi, a 22-year-old student selfimmolated in an apparent protest against the Chinese government’s continuing repressive policies in the three traditional provinces of Tibet. Tashi set himself ablaze around 12am = midnight, 17 September, 2014 (local time) in front of a police station in Tsoe City in Tsoe County (Chinese: Hezuo county, Gannan Tibetan Autonomous Prefectures, southwest of Gansu Province). The sources have also told The Tibet Post that soon after the incident, the student’s remains was taken by Chinese police that he reportedly died on the spot after raising slogans in protest against Chinese rule of Tibet. The next day, the police however returned some of his remains to his parents. Full details of the incident have yet to emerge, but, according to the same sources, many beleive that Tashi set himself on fire in protest Chinse president Xi Jinping’s state visit to India. Information on the latest incident virally spread across social networking sites like Facebook and wechat. This incident brought the total verified number of self-immolations in Tibet to 131 since February, 2009 and and of them 113 were

reportedly passed-away due to their severe injuries. A 32-year-old man Trinley Namgyal, self-immolated in an apparent protest against the Chinese government’s continuing repressive policies in Tibet. Namgyal set himself ablaze on 15 April this year, near the Chinese government building in Khangsar township in Tawu county in Kham region of eastern Tibet to protest against Chinese oppression. The Tibetan self-immolators have demanded for the return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and freedom for the Tibetan people. The wave of self-immolation protests that continued in the occupied Himalayan region over the recent years, many areas in Tibet have suffered severe crackdowns and been under heightened restrictions and controls. The Chinese government has blamed the self-immolation protests on hostile foreign forces that want to separate Tibet from China. Many Tibetans allegedly associated or linked with the selfimmolators have been detained. Some have been sentenced to long prison terms or death. The Central Tibetan Administration based in Dharamshala, India, has made several appeals urging Tibetans inside Tibet to refrain from taking drastic actions such as self-immolations. Chinese government says the Himalayan region has always been part of its territory, but Tibetans say Tibet was virtually independent for centuries until Chinese troops invaded in the 1950s.

New Delhi, September 18: - This morning at 10 am, four Tibetan activists of Students for a Free Tibet-India (SFT-India) unfurled two big 16 x 5 feet banners from a tall electrical pole and a metro construction pillar just 50 metres away from the Taj Palace Hotel on Thursday where the Chinese President Xi Jinping is residing during his two day visit to New Delhi. The banners reading “Xi: Free Tibet Now” was dropped as Xi Jinping was entering Taj Palace Hotel in order to directly confront the Chinese leader about the crimes against humanity and the illegal occupation of Tibet. The activists were all arrested and are currently in police custody. P-3.....

2014 Taiwan int’l conference on Tibet held in Taipei

2014 Taiwan International Conference on Tibet held in Taipei, on 20 September, 2014. Photo: TPI/Artemas Liu By Penny Saffron: 25 September 2014

Taipei: - An international conference to discuss the issue of Tibet, Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia was held September 20 at the National Taiwan University Alumini Hall in Taipei, the capital of Taiwan. The conference was organized jointly by the local Tibetan Welfare Association and the Office of Tibet. It was attended by around 16 outstanding academicians, media personalities and activists from various fields. P-4.....


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