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Tibetan leaders congratulate Taiwan’s President-Elect Vol. 03, Issue 149, Print Issue 73, January 31, 2016 Tibetans in Karze pray His Holiness’ health
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Canadian MP Garnett Genius meets His Holiness By Jake Thomas: January 19, 2016
Tibetans offering prayers before a large portrait of His Holiness the Dalai Lama at Chokri monastery in Karze County, eastern Tibet, January 25, 2016. Photo: TPI By Thomas Jake, January 28, 2016
Dharamshala — Over a thousand Tibetans in western China’s Sichuan province gathered this week in public at a Buddhist monastery to pray for the long life of the spiritual leader of Tibet, His Holiness the Dalai Lama, who is receiving medical treatment in the U.S. Participants in the gathering had assembled two weeks before at Chokri Monastery in Karze County (Chinese: Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province) for an already scheduled traditional ceremony, the sources said. “This is an annual prayer gathering which usually begins on Jan. 13 and ends on Jan. 25,” TPI’s source said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “But following a notice sent out on January 20, by the Central Tibetan Administration requesting prayers for His Holiness the Dalai Lama while he undergoes a health check at the Mayo Clinic in the U.S., the Tibetans extended their praying for two extra days,” sources said, adding that “they dedicated the gathering’s final two days, January 25 and 26, to those specific prayers.” Video and photos circulating on social media sites also show hundreds of Tibetan men, women, and children seated before a large shrine at the monastery and praying before a large image of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, whose photos are banned by Chinese authorities in Tibet.
Dharamshala — Mr Garnett Genius, a Member of Parliament from Canada’s Conservative Party visited Dharamshala, where he met with the spiritual leader of Tibet, His Holiness the Dalai Lama to discuss human rights and religious freedom. “I met with the Dalai Lama on Friday, to discuss human rights and religious freedom,” Mr Genius wrote in his Twitter page, on January 18. He also visited the Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile (TPiE) on January 15, 2016. During his visit, he also met with members of the standing committee of the TPiE and discussed the proceedings and system of the parliament, and the policies and structure of the Central Tibetan Administration. Genuis’ meeting with His Holiness the Dalai Lama was part of a five-day trip to India to take part in speaking engagements in front of university students. “It was an honour to meet with his holiness, the Dalai Lama,” Genuis said, adding that “He is a man deeply concerned for the rights and freedoms of all people. He has an optimistic outlook and believes Canada can play a significant, positive role promoting human rights in the region.” On November 20, interim Conservative opposition leader Rona Ambrose announced the appointment of Genuis to the role of deputy critic for human rights and religious freedoms in the Canadian Parliament. “I was honoured to be named deputy critic for human rights and religious freedoms,” Genuis said, following the appointment. “I am honoured by the trust our new leader has put in me with this appointment, and I will diligently serve in this capacity to ensure that Canada remains a strong voice for human rights
Mr Garnett Genuis, Member of Parliament, Canada with the Dalai Lama in Dharamshala, India, on January 15, 2016. Photo: TPI
around the world.” Mr Genius is a first time member of parliament from Canada. He was elected to the Canadian parliament three months ago
HRW report: Villagers in Tibet under intensive government surveillance
State-approved Tibetan Language classes: Report
Tibetan language instructors Tawu County, eastern Tibet, receiving ceremonial scarves from well-wishers in an undated photo. Photo: TPIat Chokri monastery in Karze County, eastern Tibet, January 25, 2016. Photo: TPI By Jane Cook, January 27, 2016
Dharamshala — A series of classes promoting the study of the Tibetan language and taught by university-affiliated instructors has gone ahead with apparent state approval in a Tibetan county in Kham province of eastern Tibet, sources say. The classes were held over the winter school vacation and pulled in around 200 students in Tawu (Chinese: Daofu County, Ganzi Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture), a monk with contacts in Tawu County, told TPI. “Based on the students’ language proficiency, the classes were divided into four levels—advanced, dialectical, intermediate, and beginners,” TPI’s source said, speaking on condition of anonymity. “The local Tibetan students in Tawu warmly embraced this crash course and were very attentive during the teachings,” Tsering said, adding that the series of intensive classes was also well received by students’ parents. Classes were taught by Tawu Gyaltse, a student at the Northwest University for Nationalities in Lanzhou, capital of neighboring Gansu province, and by two university friends, possibly accounting for local authorities’ approval of the initiative, sources said. At the conclusion of the 20-day winter course in Tawu County, a closing ceremony was held, presided over by Tawu Nyatso monastery schoolmaster Geshe Paljor, the sources said, adding that prizes were awarded for top-performing students. “Bilingual education is a necessity for living in a modern society,” course instructor Tawu Gyaltsen said, addressing students and others at the event. “Teaching of the Tibetan language should be promoted and strengthened through systematic planning,” Gyaltsen said. Language rights have become a particular focus for Tibetan efforts to reassert national identity in recent years, with Chinese authorities frequently closing language classes taught outside the state-controlled education system. Informally organized language courses are typically deemed “illegal associations,” with tightened security measures in Qinghai province’s Pema (Banma) county recently leading area residents to take classes in secret due to fear of arrest, sources said.
A surveillance camera near Potala Palace in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet. (file photo) By Steve Shaw: January 20, 2016
Dharamshala — An intensive government surveillance program that was due to end in 2014 appears to have been extended indefinitely, a move that Human Rights Watch (HRW) has said “signals authorities’ intention to suppress any signs of dissent or criticism among Tibetans”. Launched in 2011, the scheme known as “Benefit the Masses” was initially described by state media as a way to improve rural living standards. However, research by HRW indicates that in reality it involves surveillance, political indoctrination and the suppression of freedom of speech and religion. More than 20,000 officials and communist party personnel have been divided into teams of four or more and dispatched to over 5,000 rural villages. Along with intrusive surveillance of villagers, they carry out widespread political re-education, and establish partisan security units. The information that is collected can then potentially lead to detention or other forms of punishment. The official slogan used to describe the objective of the teams is “all villages become fortresses, and everyone is a watchman.” The program was due to last three years and end in October 2014, however it is still in operation despite the fact there has been no public announcement about an extended timeline. It is said to be unprecedented in its scope and size, and figures from 2013 show that is has come at a cost of more than 25% of the regional government’s budget, which translates to approximately 1.48 billion Yuan (approximately US$227 million) annually.
In a statement Sophie Richardson, China director at HRW, called the Chinese government’s decision to extend the surveillance program as “nothing less than a continuous human rights violation,” and said that permanent surveillance of Tibetans is the new normal. “Benefit the Masses” is just one of a number of systems introduced to prevent a recurrence of the protests that spread across the Tibetan plateau in 2008 and they are key to what Beijing calls, “social stability maintenance”. Another of these systems of information gathering is known as the “Six Ones” and was introduced in November 2011 to monitor Tibetan monasteries. Under this system almost every monastery in Tibet has been placed under direct control of authorities, with government or party officials permanently stationed inside. The purpose is said to be to “ensure that monks and nuns do not take part in activities of splitting up the motherland and disturbing social order.” An even larger system was launched in 2012 and has been described in official documents as “grid” management. It involves areas being divided up into grids and each grid being monitored by a leader and patrolled by community workers, known as “Red Armband Patrols”. These teams gather information on potential ‘troublemakers’ and have allegedly been involved in searching homes for signs of potential political dissent. “China’s surveillance scheme openly and massively infringes upon the basic rights of Tibetans protected under Chinese and international law,” Ms Richardson added. “China’s central and regional authorities should end the repressive aspects of this scheme immediately.”
in the 2015 Canadian parliamentary election. This was his first visit to the headquarters of the Central Tibetan Administration in Dharamshala.
Scientists record new species in Tibet: Report By Yangchen Dolma, January 28, 2016
Lhasa — The discovery of a new Himalayan forest frog clade in Tibet has been confirmed. It will join 12 other Chinese amphibian families. After five years of field research, scientists from Kunming Institute of Zoology under the Chinese Academy of Sciences confirmed the discovery of the rare frog that can breed without the help of water, as well as new species of reptiles on the QinghaiTibet Plateau, Chinese state-run-media Xinhua report claimed. The frogs were categorized under the oldest available generic name for this clade -- Liurana, and divided into three effective species -- Liurana alpine, Liurana medogensis and Liurana xizangensis. Based on morphological and phylogenetic data, they were believed to be “close relatives” of the family of Ceratobatrachidae that live on the south Pacific islands. Che Jing, an analyst with the institute, told Xinhua that the discovery means the definition of Ceratobatrachidae must be reviewed and this is the first record of this family in China. “The family’s distribution range has now increased from the south Pacific to include the Himalayan region. This offers valuable insight into biogenetic evolution and geological history,” Che said. The smallest frogs known to reside in China, an adult Liurana frog is 3-cm long at most, while a Liurana medogensis is less than 2 cm. The frogs live around moss in forests over 3,000 meters above sea level. Ceratobatrachidae frogs have also been spotted in the southeast Asian countries of Myanmar and Thailand. Che said a survey across the Indo-China Peninsula in southeast Asia would be necessary. In addition, Chinese scientists identified a new genus and species of tree frog, a new species of the genus Scutiger, and a new species of the genus Amolops in Modog County, southeastern Tibet, as well as two new species of Japalura on the Hengduan Mountain Range, according to findings published by the institute. Ranging from tropical forest to alpine conditions, Modog is a biodiversity-rich area in the eastern Himalayan region. Home to 47 nature reserves, the report claimed that the so called ‘Tibet Autonomous Region’ boasts China’s largest conservation area.
Tibetans capture poachers in Dzoge County, Tibet Thomas Jake, January 14, 2016
Dharamshala — Tibetan villagers assigned to guard wildlife in Dzoge County, north-eastern Tibet have taken into custody four Chinese illegally caught poaching endangered animals in the so called protected areas, sources with close contact said. The four Chinese poachers were detained at around 2:00 a.m. on January 9, 2016, near Basu village in Dzoege County in Ngaba, Amdo Province of Tibet (Chinese: Ruo’ergai county, Aba Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture) and were quickly handed over to local authorities, the sources told TPI. “The Tibetans confiscated two rifles and a jeep, along with the carcasses of 12 animals the poachers had hunted,” TPI’s source said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The animals they had killed included musk deer, wild sheep, wolves, and rabbits, sources added. Photos of the latest event also circulated on the social media. The Chinese provincial government official website later confirmed the arrest, claiming that the accused poachers are now under investigation by the county police.