The Tibet Post International e-Newspaper

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

Jailed Tibet’s prominent religious figure in serious health condition

Two killed in Tibet, dozens arrested and tortured by Chinese police P-3 ..... Vol. 03, Issue 115, Print Issue 39, 31 August 2014

Disappeared Tibet monk sentenced to 9-yrs on unknown charges

B o d - K y i - Cha-Trin

A Voice For Tibet Bi-monthly

P-4 .... www.thetibetpost.com

Rs.10

His Holiness the Dalai Lama speaks on secular ethics in Hamburg By Yeshe Choesang: 31 August 2014

Undated image of Tsultrim Nyendak , a senior teacher from Rabten Monastery in Tsachu Township in Driru County, eastern Tibet. Photo: TPI By Yeshe Choesang: 26 August 2014

Dharamshala: - Sources coming out of Tibet say a senior Tibetan monk who went missing for eight months since his arbitrary arrest last December has been sentenced to 9-years’ imprisonment. “Tsultrim Nyendak, 40, a senior teacher from Rabten Monastery in Tsachu Township in Driru County (Chinese: Biru County in Naqu Prefecture, Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), was sentenced to 9 years’ in prison by an Intermediate People’s Court in Lhasa,” Samdup, a Tibetan from Belgium told The Tibet Post International (TPI) on Tuesday. P-5..... Parliamentary delegation briefs Australian Parliament on Tibet

Photo 1: Tibetan delegation with Hon. Warren Entsch, member of Australian Parliament and Photo 2: Speaker Penpa Tsering briefing the Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs at Australian Parliament. Seated beside is Ms Teresa Gambaro MP, Chair of the Committee. Photo: CTA/DIIR By Yangchen Dolma: 29 August 2014

Canberra: A four member Tibetan Parliamentary delegation led by Speaker Penpa Tsering visited the Australian Parliament on Wednesday, 27 August and met with some members of the Australian All-Party Parliamentary Group for Tibet including its Chairman Hon. Warren Entsch MP. According to a report by the Tibetan administration, Speaker Penpa Tsering briefed the six MPs and two Senators present on the current political, environmental and human rights situation inside Tibet. All the members showed keen interest and asked questions. It was a meaningful meeting. P-5.....

Hamburg, Germany, 23 August 2014: - Spreading his message of compassion, religious harmony, inner peace and secular ethic, the spiritual leader of Tibet His Holiness the Dalai Lama spoke to an audience of around 7,000 people in Hamburg on Saturday, at the beginning of his visit to Germany. His Holiness the Dalai Lama was interviewed by ZDF TV’s Bettina Hansen during his Visit to the northern city of Hamburg , Germany. Answering questions, including, what makes him happy, His Holiness told ZDF TV he is happy to be one human being among 7 billion others. And when she enquired about his memories of his childhood, he told her that first of all he remembers his mother’s face, recalling that despite being uneducated she was the living image of kindness. Response to daily reports in the news of violence in the name of religion His Holiness asked; “If you believe in a creator god, and that all beings are created by that god, so all of us are brothers and sisters created by him, how can you then kill each other? It’s unthinkable.” “I’m very happy to be here. I’m also pleased that at the Tibet Centre you are trying to do more than just offer Buddhist teachings. There is knowledge of the mind that can be of use to everyone in our tradition and you are making it available thank you, “ said His Holiness after he walked onto the stage at the Congress Centre. Promoting human values, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate said all human beings are essentially the same and desire the same things from life. “Whenever I meet people, ordinary people, political leaders, business leaders or religious leaders, I always think of them as fellow human beings. We are all the same, physically, mentally and emotionally, he said when moderator Gert Scobel invited His Holiness to speak about ethics in society.” “We are beings who have feelings of pleasure and pain with a desire to be happy and right to be able to fulfill that desire. The difference between human beings and other beings is our intelligence. It gives us the ability to look to the future, which in

His Holiness the Dalai Lama at the Congress Center in Hamburg, Germany where about 7000 people attending his teaching on August 24, 2014. Photo/Manuel Bauer

turn brings us worry and anxiety. But only as human beings do we have the opportunity to deal with the mind,” His Holiness said. He said that on a mental level disturbances are related to our self-centered attitude. The more self-centered we are, the more we neglect others and the greater the distance we feel from them. Developing an attitude more concerned with others reduces fear and fosters friendship. Emotions that disturb our minds can only be dealt with by the mind, not by drink, drugs or surgery. Removing the part of the brain that experiences emotion would not work because human beings need feelings. But we also need a calm mind. We are not talking about the next life or heaven and hell, he said, this is not a question of relying on religious teachings,

although all the major religious traditions are based on ethics and convey a message of love and compassion. We need ways and means that apply to all human beings; we need secular ethics. And according to the longstanding Indian model, secular ethics involves having respect for all religious traditions and even for those who have no faith. Secular ethics as an approach to peace of mind, an ethical approach to inner values not dependent on this or that religious tradition, is an appropriate approach for all P-2..... 7 billion human beings. Candlelight vigil and rally held for Tibet shooting victims

China detains Tibetan female writer in eastern Tibet on unknown charges

On 20 August, 2014, protesters holding posters and portrait of His Holiness the Dalai Lama urged the United Nations to urgently speak out against China’s ongoing oppression in Tibet. Photo: TPI/Dawa Phurbu By Penny Saffron: 21 August 2014

China opens a new railway link to Tibet’s 2nd largest city

Dharamshala: - Emerging reports coming out Tibet say Chinese authorities have imposed a heavy restriction in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet during the first day of the six day Shoton, or ‘Yogurt,’ Festival that took place on Monday. “Chinese authorities have stepped up heavy restrictions on the religious activities of Tibetans in the capital Lhasa as they observe the festival at the Drepung Monastery,” Tezin, a Tibetan living in India told The Tibet Post International (TPI). The latest images of the event received by TPI once again reveal the real situation in Lhasa, a place tightly controlled and repressed P-5..... by the Chinese government. The new line is an extension of the controversial Tibet line so called as the highest railway in the world. Photo: Media file By Yangchen Dolma: 20 August 2014

Dharamshala: - China on Friday, 15 August opened an extension of its controversial railway into Tibet, state-run media reported, linking the Tibetan capital of Lhasa with Shigatse, second largest city in Tibet. Tibet is a highly sensitive region, not just because of ongoing repression and continued local opposition to Chinese government control, but because of the region’s strategic position next to neighbours India, Nepal and Myanmar. The track is an extension of the Qinghai-Tibet line -- an engineering marvel named the “closest stretch of railway to the sky.” The railway to Lhasa launched in 2006, which passes spectacular icy peaks on the Tibetan highlands, reaching altitudes as high as 5,000 m (16,400 ft) above sea level. When it opens, it will allow passengers to connect by rail from Beijing all the way to Shigatse, a gateway to Everest, which lies just 240 kilometers (150 miles) away, on the border with Nepal. Critics of the railway, including Tibetans and Tibet support groups, say it has spurred an influx of long-term P-5.....

Seven months pregnant woman kills herself in eastern Tibet Undated image of the 20-year old Tibetan female writer- Dawa Tsomo from Chida village in Dzatoe County, eastern Tibet. Photo: TPI By Yeshe Choesang: 27 August 2014

Dharamshala: - In further crackdown on the Tibetan dissents in Tibet, a young Tibetan female writer was arrested by Chinese police in Dzatoe County of eastern Tibet on unknown charges. “Chinese police have detained a Tibetan female writer named Dawa Tsomo aged around 20 in Chidza village of Dzatoe county in eastern Tibet on August 23,” Ven Konchok Dhondup, a Tibetan monk living in India told The Tibet Post International (TPI) on Wednesday. It seems she was arrested after police accused her of sharing politically sensitive information with others from her mobile phone. ‘Although details of the arrest remain unknown due to the strict restrictions currently imposed by Chinese authorities in the Dzatoe (Chinese: Zaduo in northwestern China’s Qinghai province),’ Ven Dhondup said. Tsomo was taken from her home by Chinese police and was apparently detained for sharing banned contents on micromessaging service WeChat and website or blog.

Sources stated that “the Chinese police suddenly arrived at his home (Approximately 2 pm on August 23 2014) and detained her without a valid reason.” “Chinese authorities conducting the investigation accused of Tsomo using her phone to share information to others through the WeChat microblog messaging service and website or blog of posting topics related Tibet issue, including Tibet freedom, and the current situation in Dzatoe county, and the suffering of the Tibet under Chinese rule. The violent crackdowns on anti-mining protesters in Yulshul County brings into focus the repressive tactics commonly used by the Chinese security forces. In recent years, authorities have sought to silence any kind of opposition against the Chinese authorities. In May 2009, Chinese police fired live ammunition and tear gas on Tibetans in Surmang Township for protesting illegal mining operations. More than 12 Tibetans were severely beaten and sentenced on false charges of political activities.

Dhanma county in Kham region, eastern Tibet. Photo: TPI By Yeshe Choesang: 28 August 2014

Dharamshala: — A seven months pregnant Tibetan woman committed suicide by hanging herself after hearing of the death of her husband, who was being shot and detained by Chinese police during mass protests in Dhanma County, eastern Tibet. P-5.....


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