Tibetan Cousins in Burning Protest
Tsepo, 20, died while
Tenzin, 25, was taken away by security forces after they self-immolated
in front of a school in Driru (in Chinese, Biru) county in the Nagchu
(Naqu) prefecture of the Tibet Autonomous Region on Thursday, the
sources said.
The self-immolations, confirmed only on Saturday
due to a security and communication clampdown in the area, raises to
seven the number of Tibetan protest burnings the past week.
Six
of the seven have died in the highest number of burnings and deaths in
one week and brings to 62 the total number of self-immolations since
February 2009 when Tibetans began to torch themselves to challenge
Chinese rule in Tibetan-populated areas.
Local contacts told
Tibetans in exile that the cousins set themselves alight and shouted
slogans calling for freedom in Tibet and the return of Tibet's spiritual
leader the Dalai Lama as they protested in front of a school in Narong
Phampa subdivision, Unit 2, in Driru county.
They also pleaded
for all Tibetans to be "united like brothers,” said Narwang Tharpa, a
Tibetan living in exile in India, citing people in the area.
“Currently,
the Chinese security forces have surrounded the Narong village, and
stopped all communication channels, rendering it difficult to be in
contact [with people there]," he said. "Hence, getting the detailed
situation on the ground is difficult.”
“It has taken two days for
information about this latest protest to emerge. Tibetans in Driru
County are being intimidated in both visible and invisible ways,"
London-based advocacy group Free Tibet's director Stephanie Brigden said
in a statement.
“Chinese state security forces have been
deployed in large numbers across Driru County. The Internet and
telephones are often blocked and, when they are working, Tibetans are
afraid to talk about what is happening because they fear that their
communications are being monitored by the government."
Forefront of opposition
Tibetans in Driru have been in the forefront of opposition to Chinese
rule in the Tibetan Autonomous Region since deadly riots in the region
in 2008, with monks and nuns protesting and abandoning monasteries in
order to defy “intrusive” new Chinese regulations.
Most of the 62
burnings so far have occurred in Tibetan-populated areas of the Chinese
provinces of Sichuan, Qinghai, and Gansu.
There have been seven
burnings so far in the Tibetan Autonomous Region—three in Driru, two in
the regional capital Lhasa and one each in Chamdo county's Karma
township, and in the town of Damshung, just outside Lhasa.
Tibet’s
India-based exile parliament has meanwhile called on foreign
governments and human rights organizations to apply “meaningful
pressure” on China to end the crisis in Tibet.
“The
self-immolations by Tibetans [are the] highest form of nonviolent
protest against the Chinese government’s systematic repression of their
freedom of religion and human rights,” the parliament said in a
statement Wednesday.
Reported by Lobsang Sherab for RFA's Tibetan service. Translated by Dorjee Damdul. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.
View this story online at: http://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/burn-10272012122340.html
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