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China wants Tibet to disappear: His Holiness Vol. 04, Issue 166, Print Issue 90, October 31, 2016

Outspoken Tibetan monk freed after 5-year term

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Tibet’s culture of nonviolence and peace worth preserving: His Holiness By Jane Cook: October 23, 2016

Tibetan Buddhist monk Jigme Guri, also known as Labrang Jigme released from prison after 5-year term. Photo: TPI By Molly Lortie: October 27, 2016

Dharamshala — A respected scholar monk known as Labrang Jigme returned home Wednesday after being released two months after his five-year prison sentence expired. Jigme Guri, a monk at Labrang monastery in Amdo, who had been previously imprisoned and severely tortured in 2008 and 2010, is well-known as a writer and intellectual who is the only known Tibetan to record on video in Tibet an account of his own imprisonment and views on Chinese policies against the Dalai Lama in which he gave his full identity. He gained tremendous popularity among Tibetans particularly for his writings and determination to bear witness. Tibetan writer Woeser writes: “Because of this, Tibetan people everywhere recognized him as a hero of their people, naming him ‘Labrang Jigme’.” His release from prison yesterday was greeted with great relief; there have been serious fears for his welfare as he was believed to have been hospitalized while in prison. Jigme Guri was released after dark at around 9 pm on Wednesday, October 26th from prison in Lanzhou, the provincial capital of Gansu, and taken by the prison authorities to his family home in Labrang town in Sangchu (Chinese, Xiahe) county. His relatives were not given permission to welcome him with a traditional ceremony and according to reports, and he was not allowed to wear monks’ robes. He was pictured wearing a blue jacket and trousers, and wearing glasses. Tibetan political prisoners are generally not allowed to return to their monasteries or nunneries after release, and Jigme Guri was allegedly not allowed to go to Labrang. P-4...

Milan, Italy — “My concern now is with keeping Tibetan culture and identity alive,” His Holiness the Dalai Lama said, adding that its “a culture of non-violence and peace, its worth preserving.” The ancient city of Rho bestowed honorary citizenship on His Holiness the Dalai Lama on Saturday, at a gathering of an audience of 12000 cheering people, inside the Rho Fiera Milano hall in Milan, Italy. Mayor of Rho, Pietro Romano conferred the freedom of that city on His Holiness and Richard Gere was called upon to introduce His Holiness. “I’ve been here listening to His Holiness’s teachings on compassion, love and acceptance. Wherever he goes he creates an atmosphere of inclusiveness. He makes everyone feel welcome. Thinking about this reminded me of a verse from the Persian poet Rumi: ‘Come, come, whoever you are. Wanderer, worshipper, lover of leaving. It doesn’t matter. Ours is not a caravan of despair. Come, even if you have broken your vows a thousand times. Come, yet again, come, come.” Stepping forward to the podium, flanked by his Italian and English interpreters, the Nobel Peace Prize winner thanked the ancient city of Rho for making him an honorary citizen. “I’m extremely happy to be able to be with you. We are all human beings. We may have slightly different faces but otherwise we are physically, mentally and emotionally the same. We all want to live a happy life, but we don’t always know how it can be done,” the spiritual leader said. “In a materialistic society we look for joy in material goals and yet they don’t seem to bring complete satisfaction. I meet a lot of affluent people who are also full of stress and anxiety. They need to pay more attention to inner values,” His Holiness stressed. “I too could be subject to doubt, worry and anger, but I’ve learned that peace of mind is not just a matter of dullness,

Ancient Italian city of Rho, presenting His Holiness the Dalai Lama with honorary citizenship at the start of his talk in Milan, Italy on October 22, 2016. Photo/Tenzin Choejor/OHHDL

but of being alert and using my intelligence to the full. If we only look at problems we face close up they seem very grave, but looked at from different angles our attitude becomes more realistic. The mind remains calm, which we need if we’re going to be able to exercise our intelligence. “When I was growing up I was enveloped in formality. When I went to China in 1954-55 and to India in 1956, formality prompted me to feel nervous. After I became a refugee, however, I left all that formality behind and feel much freer for it. “On a more serious note, while we are enjoying being together

Monk beaten and arrested afer solo protest calling for freedom in Tibet

Mysterious ice avalanches in Tibet leave scientists puzzled By Steve Shaw: October 27, 2016

London — Two massive ice avalanches that occurred in close proximity in Tibet’s Aru Range have left scientists struggling to understand what might have caused them, with one calling the occurrence “unprecedented”. The first took place in July 2016 and sent glacial ice and rock tumbling down the mountain valley, killing nine people. According to NASA’s Earth Observatory, experts were puzzled by the event because the region had experienced ordinary conditions with normal temperatures and average rainfall. Adding to this, the part of the glacier that collapsed was situated on reasonably flat land. Scientists with the International Association of Cryospheric Sciences and the International Permafrost Association were then shocked to see a second avalanche take place in September, just a few kilometres south of the first. “Even one of these gigantic glacier avalanches is very unusual,” Andreas Kääb, a glaciologist at the University of Oslo told NASA. “Two of them within close geographical and temporal vicinity is, to our best knowledge, unprecedented.” Research suggests that the avalanches were possibly caused by a process known as surging. It occurs when the ice in a glacier flows down from the upper section of the glacier 10 to 100 times faster than usual. And while there have been no documented cases of surging glaciers causing a sudden collapse, data suggests that the surging on the first glacier began at the end of last year and likely caused a large pooling of water, weakening it and priming it for collapse. Various teams of scientists are continuing to search for a conclusive explanation for both avalanches but NASA says that long term climate change has not been ruled out. Tibet has been suffering from the consequences of climate change for a number of years and temperatures have increased higher than anywhere else in the world. It is predicted that if the melting continues at this rate, two-thirds of the 47,000 glaciers will be gone by 2050 and nearly 2 billion people across Asia will suffer water shortages as rivers slow. Major Chinese industrial projects such as the mining of copper, gold, silver, chromium and lithium have also taken a major toll on Tibet’s environment and contributed to global warming through the destruction of vast areas of grasslands, wetlands and permafrost. When world leaders met in Paris for critical climate change talks in December 2015 the International Campaign for Tibet (ICT) released a report highlighting the importance of Tibet’s fragile environment. Matteo Mecacci, President of ICT, said in a statement: “As talks began in Paris, both the Dalai Lama and the Beijing leadership have expressed alarm about the scale of the environmental crisis in Tibet, the ‘Roof of the World’. Known as the earth’s ‘Third Pole’, because it contains the biggest reserves of freshwater outside the Arctic and Antarctic, Tibet’s changing climate not only affects the monsoon in P-4... Asia, but also weather in Europe.

Lobsang Tsultrim, a Buddhist monk from Kirti Monastery in Ngaba County of north-eastern Tibet. Photo: TPI By Yeshe Choesang: October 20, 2016

Dharamshala — A young Tibetan monk was brutally beaten by Chinese police in Ngaba County of north-eastern Tibet when they arbitrarily arrested him after staging a peaceful protest against Chinese government repressive rule in Tibet. A source says he was hospitalised next day in critical condition. Chinese police arrested Lobsang Tsultrim after shouting slogans while walking along a street in Ngaba county’s main town on October 17, at around 1:00 p.m. He was hospitalised because of injuries he suffered to his body after he was severely beaten by the Chinese authorities. Tsultrim shouted slogans calling for “Long life of His Holiness the Dalai Lama” and “Freedom in Tibet”. Chinese police arrived at the spot and immediately started beating him severely, a source with direct knowledge of the move told the TPI, on Thursday, speaking on condition of anonymity. “When Tsultrim arrived at the Tibetan Language Middle School he was arbitrarily disrupted by Chinese police,” the TPI’s source said, adding that the Buddhist monk is reportedly in “critical condition.” A photo of his protest received from the area also shows the monk staging a lone protest by carrying a portrait of His Holiness the Dalai Lama with a traditional scarf. According to the same source, Tsultrim was rushed to Ngaba Hospital the next day after he was severely beaten and tortured in police custody. A large number of security forces and police are also deployed throughout the Ngaga town streets and surrounding areas after the protest. The source also said that the local Chinese

government has currently imposed a tight control over the movement of Tibetans, including monks of the monastery. Arbitrary arrests and detention have increased amid unusual intensification of state surveillance measures in the region. Reports claim Beijing is isolating Tibet from the world and Tibetans face lengthy jail sentences and torture for sharing information about any protests, including the self-immolations. Hundreds of Tibetans, including writers, bloggers, singers and environmentalists, have been arbitrarily detained or are imprisoned since 2008, after attempting to express their views or share news of the situation in Tibet with the outside world, and provides further evidence of a widespread crackdown against free expression in Tibet. Sporadic demonstrations challenging Chinese repressive rule have continued in Tibet since widespread protests swept the region in 2008, with a verified total of 144 Tibetans have selfimmolated in protests against Beijing’s rule since 2009, calling for “freedom in Tibet” and “return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama to Tibet.” Tibet was invaded by Communist China, starting in 1949, Beijing calls a “peaceful liberation”. Since that time, over 1.2 million out of 6 Tibetans have been killed, over 6000 monasteries have been destroyed— the acts of murder, rape and arbitrary imprisonment, torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment were inflicted on the Tibetans inside Tibet. But, authorities in Beijing still claim that “China ‘peacefully liberated’ Tibet, and that the Tibetans are living in a “Maoist socialist paradise.”

here in peace and contentment, right now in other parts of the world people filled with fear and anger are killing each other. Too often violence arises because of our focus on secondary differences between us. We allow ourselves to see others in terms of ‘us’ and ‘them’. But, since we are all equally human beings, we have to promote a greater sense of the oneness of all human beings. On that basis we can solve whatever problems we face. We can enter into meaningful dialogue and resolve P-2... conflict in a human way.” Two Tibetan monks disappeared after land-grab protest in Tibet By Yangchen Dolma: October 26, 2016

Dharamshala — Two Tibetan Buddhist monks from Ngaba county of eastern Tibet have ‘disappeared’ in connection with protests of a land grab after their detention by Chinese authorities, in August 2016. Lobsang Sherab, 35 and Gedun Dakpa, 39, from Thangkor Socktsang Monastery, were arbitrarily detained by Chinese police in Thangkor Town, Dzoege in Ngaba County of northeastern Tibet, August 24, 2016. Dakpa was the treasurer at his monastery and had no prior criminal record. Sherab was a worker at the monastery’s store. He was arbitrarily detained by Chinese security personnel and they also threatened other monks, one of whom was severely injured. Sources indicate that both monks were likely detained on suspicion that they shared information with outsiders about peaceful protests staged by Tibetan nomads against government land seizures in Ka Bharma Village in Thangkor Town. It has been almost two months since the monks have been taken to an undisclosed location. Family members and relatives have no information about their whereabouts. In August, Chinese authorities detained a Tibetan monk following his protest against an illegal land grab by Chinese authorities in Sershul County of eastern Tibet. The source said that the Tibetan monk known as Lobsang Soepa carried a large sign with writings in Tibetan and Chinese that read, “The grassland in Wonpo township’s Village No. 2, in Sershul County should be distributed in accordance with the law.” “The grassland should be returned to the locals living on the land, without any bias.” In May, Hundreds of Tibetans in Khanya Township (Ch: Kaniang), Drakgo County (Ch: Luhuo), just signed a petition to plead with the local government to investigate the severe living condition in the township of Kham region, eastern Tibet, as apparently Tibetans who live in rural areas are still facing deepening poverty in the face of China’s so-called economic prosperity. According to local contacts, the Chinese government has deliberately ceased poverty alleviation and construction projects in Khanya Township since 2008, which has left the township in extreme poverty ever since. Collapsing roads in the raining season and snow-sealed mountain passes in the winter have trapped villagers in the mountains for several times. Food and accommodation in the township were in serious shortage during these natural disasters, while the government remains unresponsive. In the same month, more than 100 Tibetans have protested against Chinese mining operations at a site considered sacred by local Tibetan residents, drawing a large police force to the area and prompting fears of clashes. Sources said that “the ongoing mining has led to toxic wastes being dumped into the river resulting in the death of a large number of fish.” “About 100 local Tibetans then gathered in Yulshok Gargye to demand an end to the project and calling for urgent action to protect environment and wildlife,” the sources added. The locals have engaged in shouting slogans “there is no rule of law for the Communist Party” and saying they lied to us, they cheated on us, they betrayed us and have broken promises. P-4...


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