Rights group reports 8 Tibetans sentenced in China over March attack on police stationAugust 18th, 2009 Report: 8 Tibetans jailed over protests in ChinaBEIJING — A group of Tibetan Buddhist monks and lay people have been sentenced to up to seven years in prison over a March attack on a police station in western China, a Tibetan human rights monitoring group said. The eight were sentenced Thursday by a court in Qinghai province's Machen county, according to a report received Tuesday from the Tibetan Center for Human Rights and Democracy, a group based in the Indian town of Dharamsala that is home to the self-declared Tibetan government in exile.
9 Tibetans held for protesting outside Chinese embassy in DelhiApril 13th, 2009 NEW DELHI - Nine Tibetan students were arrested Monday after they chained themselves to the barbed wire fencing outside the Chinese embassy here to protest against a Chinese court recently sentencing two Tibetans to death, police said. 'Nine Tibetans have been arrested for protesting outside the Chinese embassy.
China thanks India, but reminds it of Tibet pledgeMarch 25th, 2009 NEW DELHI - Worried that Tibetans may hold violent protests to observe the 50th year of the Dalai Lama's exile, China Wednesday thanked India for providing security to their missions but reminded New Delhi of its pledge not to allow Tibetans to indulge in political activities. 'Tibetans in India have not stopped protests and candle-light demonstrations.
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.
On 50th uprising anniversary, Tibetans fast for 50 hoursMarch 10th, 2009 NEW DELHI - Hundreds of Tibetans marched in the capital Tuesday shouting 'Free Tibet' slogans and a majority among them began a fast for 50 hours, 50 minutes and 50 seconds to mark the completion of five decades of the Tibetan uprising against China. With slogans such as 'Human Rights don't exist in Tibet' and 'Indian government, support us' ringing loud in the air, the Tibetans marched from Rajghat to Parliament Street about six kilometres away.
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.
Tibetan top monks want own sect laws on reincarnationsMarch 9th, 2009 DHARAMSALA - Top monks of Tibetan sects Sunday sought a new law by the Tibetan parliament in exile to govern the procedure of selecting and appointing reincarnations in Tibetan Buddhism. In a resolution passed at a meeting of the high lamas at the end of three days of deliberations, it was decided that the issue of having a law on reincarnations should be sent to the Tibetan parliament in exile.
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.
Nepal fails to stamp out Tibetan protestsMarch 6th, 2009 KATHMANDU - Despite a ban by Nepal's Maoist government, Tibetan refugees have kept up protests against the Chinese annexation of the former Buddhist kingdom and vowed to observe the 50th anniversary of their uprising. The protests started from Feb 25, marked as the first day of Lhosar, the Tibetan new year.
Nepal bans protests ahead of Tibetan revolt anniversaryFebruary 28th, 2009 KATHMANDU - With less than a fortnight left for the 50th anniversary of a failed Tibetan uprising against China, Nepal, home to thousands of Tibetans, has declared a ban on protests by the diaspora. The district administration in Kathmandu, which last year witnessed continuous protests by Tibetans for almost eight months, has prohibited all protests near the Chinese embassy and its visa office from Saturday.
Tibetan monks stage protest in China: ReportFebruary 28th, 2009 BEIJING - Paramilitary police Friday sealed off a monastery in western China after more than 100 Tibetan monks staged a protest outside local government offices, US-based Radio Free Asia reported. The Buddhist monks from Lutsang monastery in Qinghai province marched to the offices in Guinan county (Mangra in Tibetan), issued a demand for greater government understanding and held a 30-minute candlelit vigil, local residents and a former monk told the broadcaster.
Canada recognizes Tibetan New YearFebruary 26th, 2009 TORONTO - In yet another gesture of goodwill towards the Dalai Lama which could be perceived as an affront by the Chinese, Canada Wednesday recognized the Tibetan New Year of Losar. China had vehemently protested when the Conservative government of Canada honoured the Tibetan spiritual leader with the nation's honorary citizenship - a rare honour conferred only on a few leaders - two years ago.
Tibetan exiles take out silent protestFebruary 25th, 2009 DHARAMSALA - Hundreds of Tibetan exiles Tuesday took out a silent protest here on the eve of Losar (Tibetan New Year). 'The exiles participated in the peaceful protest to express solidarity with our brethren who sacrificed their lives for rights of the people of Tibet,' said president of the Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) Tsewang Rigzin.
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.
Tibetan exiles not to celebrate new yearFebruary 6th, 2009 DHARAMSALA - Tibetan exiles have decided not to celebrate Losar (Tibetan New Year), the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) of its government-in-exile said Saturday. According to the Tibetan lunar calendar, Losar is the first day of the year.