Foreign reporters allowed scripted trip to Tibet
LHASA, China — The Chinese paramilitary police who usually patrol Tibet’s often tense capital went to work in black and yellow track suits last week instead of their green uniforms. The occasion: a government-arranged visit by a group of foreign journalists.
Sixteen months after an uprising prompted a harsh Chinese crackdown, the four-day glimpse given to 16 foreign journalists showed official nervousness about Tibet — which has unsteadily weathered nearly six decades of Chinese rule — and how hard the government is trying to show that the uneasy region has returned to normal.
The reporters, who arrived Thursday, were taken on rushed visits to an experimental primary school in Lhasa, to a new home to meet a young Tibetan couple and their two children and to a monastery at the heart of last year’s protests.
Over the weekend, they saw trim young men in crew cuts and black and yellow track suits marching in patrols around Lhasa’s medieval Tibetan quarter.
The men said they were students and some carried math text books. But local residents said they were actually People’s Armed Police officers who had dressed in green uniforms before the reporters arrived and who have been a constant presence since anti-Chinese riots erupted in Lhasa in March 2008.
Officials said security adjustments were made for the reporters to help them report Tibet’s “true situation.”
“For the convenience of the visiting reporters, we made some special arrangements in terms of the route and the program, and we relocated some armed police officers who were patrolling,” Gongbao Zhaxi, a senior Communist Party official in the Tibetan Autonomous Region, told the reporters.
Last year’s violence, which started in Lhasa and then spread across western China, shook Chinese leaders, coming just months before the Beijing Olympics and after years in which the government invested billions of dollars into the poor region to spur development.
In response, Beijing poured troops into Tibetan areas, kept foreign media and tourists out, purged Buddhist monasteries — which have been at the center of anti-government sentiment — and intensified a vilification campaign against the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, accusing him of instigating the unrest.
Arrests and detentions across Tibetan areas were widespread. Though 80 have been sentenced in quick trials, hundreds remain jailed awaiting trial. The government has never given a complete accounting and details of punishments continue to trickle out.
The harsh security and invective have served to further alienate many Tibetans and aggravate tensions, according to some Tibetans and Tibet support groups.
“The Chinese government does not want to address these problems, and they reduce it to the Dalai Lama and separatist groups. This is a way of avoiding their responsibilities,” said Woeser, a Tibetan writer and blogger based in Beijing who like many Tibetans uses one name.
Getting information out of Tibet is difficult and interviews on government-organized reporting trips are often unreliable, making it “hard to get a grasp of what’s really going on,” she said. “According to what I know, the situation is still serious.”
A monk in his 30s arranged a secret meeting with one of the foreign reporters in Lhasa on last week’s trip and described the political study classes he’s required to attend once a week at his monastery as painful.
In his interview, the monk, who had dressed in civilian clothes to avoid drawing attention to himself, told the reporter from RTE Irish radio and television that monks are forced to criticize the Dalai Lama during the classes.
More than half the monks in his monastery had returned to their home provinces or left the monkhood since last year because “they found the pressure too much,” said the monk, who asked that his name not be used to avoid punishment.
When the reporters were taken to the Jokhang Temple, the usually crowded shrine seemed empty. Two weeks after last year’s riots, about 30 monks broke down in tears in front of another group of foreign journalists, shouting for the Dalai Lama’s return and complaining about the heavy security.
The temple’s chief monk Aweng Quzha told reporters that the monks who had spoken out last year were misled by rumors and had since been given instruction in Chinese law to help them understand that what they had done was wrong.
Only about 20 monks could be seen at the temple and only one, the chief monk, spoke with reporters. Two buses carrying about 50 monks each were seen arriving at the Jokhang the next day.
Associated Press writer Alexa Olesen in Beijing contributed to this report.
Related News
Chinese official denies reported ban on foreign visitors in Tibet during sensitive anniversarySeptember 24th, 2009 Official denies Tibet ban for foreign visitorsBEIJING — A Chinese official on Thursday denied reports that Tibet will be closed to foreign visitors over the sensitive Oct. 1 national day period.
Earthquake strikes Bhutan, tremors felt in LhasaSeptember 21st, 2009 LHASA - An earthquake measuring 6.3 on the Richter scale jolted Bhutan Monday afternoon and the tremors were felt in Lhasa, authorities said. The tremors struck at 4:53 p.m.
China bans foreign tourists from Tibet ahead of Beijing celebrationsSeptember 21st, 2009 China bans foreign tourists from TibetBEIJING — China has banned foreign tourists from traveling to Tibet ahead of a parade in the capital to mark 60 years of Communist rule, an official said Tuesday, amid stepped-up security across the country to ensure nothing mars the celebrations. Tan Lin, an official with the business administration office at the Tourism Bureau of Tibet, said foreign tourists would be banned from Tuesday onwards, but those who have already arrived would be allowed to stay.
Tibet reports record high temperature in over 58 yearsJuly 24th, 2009 LHASA - The Tibetan Autonomous Region in southwest China Friday saw a record high temperature of 30.4 degrees Celsius since the meteorological department began recording data in 1951, officials said. Lhasa, the main city of the region, with an altitude of 3,650 meters above the sea level, recorded a temperature of 29.9 degrees Celsius Thursday, reaching the previous record set on June 15, 1998, the Tibet Meteorological Station said.
Report: Air China to launch direct Beijing-Tibet flights to boost tourismJuly 1st, 2009 Air China to offer direct Beijing-Tibet flightsBEIJING — Air China will begin offering direct flights from Beijing to Tibet this month, shaving two hours off the current travel time in a bid to boost tourism, state media said Wednesday. The official Xinhua News Agency said the new service to Tibet's capital of Lhasa will depart Beijing daily from July 10.
Chinese court sentences three over arson attack during 2008 riots in Tibet capital LhasaApril 21st, 2009 Three sentenced over arson in 2008 Tibet riotsBEIJING — A Chinese court has sentenced three people to lengthy prison terms over deadly arson attacks during last year's rioting in the Tibetan capital Lhasa, state media reported Tuesday. One suspect, Penkyi, was given the death penalty with a two-year reprieve for helping to lead attacks on two clothing stores that killed six people, the official Xinhua News Agency said.
Tibetan death sentences get little attention in ChinaApril 10th, 2009 BEIJING - When two Tibetans were sentenced to death on Wednesday for setting fire to shops during last year's protest riots in Lhasa, the Chinese authorities chose to tell the rest of the world before they told their own citizens. The episode illustrates the peculiar way in which news travels in China, where the government controls the traditional media, but the Internet offers an alternative, reports the Christian Science Monitor (CSM).
Two sentenced to death for Tibet riotsApril 8th, 2009 LHASA - A Chinese court sentenced two people to death after finding them guilty of starting fires during riots in Lhasa in March 2008, a court spokesman said Wednesday. Two other people were given death sentences with a two-year reprieve, and one person was handed life imprisonment, the spokesman of the Lhasa Municipal Intermediate People's Court said.
Hundreds of Tibetans, monks attack police stationMarch 23rd, 2009 BEIJING - Police detained nearly 100 people after hundreds of monks and lay Tibetans attacked a police station in China's western province of Qinghai, state media and Tibetan exiles said Sunday. Several hundred people, including about 100 monks from the Ragya monastery, attacked the Gyala township police station in Qinghai's remote Golok (Guoluo) prefecture, Xinhua news agency said.
Important dates in Tibet's recent historyMarch 9th, 2009 BEIJING - The question of Tibet's autonomy has been a bone of contention for decades. The following are important dates in modern Tibetan history:
1912 - Chinese troops expelled from Lhasa after the fall of the Qing Dynasty in Beijing.
China's repression in Tibet worst for 30 years: ReportMarch 9th, 2009 BEIJING - China's repression of Tibetans' political, civil and religious rights in response to last year's unrest has reached levels last seen in the 1970s, the International Campaign for Tibet said in a report Monday. 'Since the protests began on March 10 last year, state repression of Tibetans' freedoms of expression, religion and association has intensified to a level not seen in Tibet since the paranoia and Maoist excesses of the Cultural Revolution (1966-76),' the London-based group said.
Two Tibetan women arrested after protestsMarch 7th, 2009 BEIJING - Two Tibetan women were arrested for staging separate protests that were critical of China in the Chinese province of Sichuan, an advocacy group for Tibet said Saturday. A nun in her 20s and a 36-year-old woman were detained Thursday in Ganzi after handing out pamphlets that called for the exiled Dalai Lama's return to Tibet, respect for Tibetans' human rights, religious freedom and the release of Tibetan political prisoners, the International Campaign for Tibet said.
Tibet under siege ahead of anniversary, activists sayMarch 6th, 2009 BEIJING - China has placed Tibet under 'de facto martial law' ahead of the 50th anniversary of the uprising against Chinese rule March 10, 1959, activists said Friday. The troop presence was to prevent protests like those that swept across Lhasa and other Tibetan regions last year, the London-based Free Tibet Campaign said.
China jails two Tibetan nuns over protestsFebruary 21st, 2009 BEIJING - A court in southwestern China's Sichuan province has sentenced two Tibetan Buddhist nuns to nine and 10 years in prison after a court convicted them of crimes linked to protests last March, a Tibetan exile group said Friday. The Ganzi (Kardze) County Intermediate People's Court sentenced the two nuns from the Pangri Na Convent for taking part in a mass protest in support of Tibetan autonomy and the exiled Dalai Lama, the Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD) said.
76 convicted over Lhasa violenceFebruary 10th, 2009 LHASA - Courts have handed out sentences to 76 people involved in last year's riots in the Tibetan capital Lhasa, an official said. Nyima Cering of the regional People's Congress said Tuesday night that the riots seriously affected China's sovereignty.