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Tibetan Monk in New Burning Protest
AUGUST 6, 2012-A Tibetan monk in China's southwestern Sichuan province set
himself ablaze today in the latest in a wave of self-immolation protests
challenging Chinese rule, Tibetan sources said on Monday.
Lobsang Trinlay, a monk at the restive Kirti monastery in Ngaba (in Chinese,
Aba) Tibetan prefecture, burned himself shortly after 5:00 p.m. local time
on Aug. 6, Sungrab Gyatso, a monk at Drepung monastery in India said, citing
contacts in Tibet.
"Witnesses said that he shouted slogans calling for the return of [exiled
spiritual leader] the Dalai Lama to Tibet and for Tibetans living in and
outside of Tibet to reunite," Gyatso said.
A Tibetan resident of the area confirmed the account, speaking on condition
of anonymity.
"A Ngaba Kirti monastery monk self-immolated on Aug. 6. His name is Lobsang
Trinlay. After Chinese police extinguished the flames, he was taken away
alive," he said.
Citing a local source and speaking on condition of anonymity, a Tibetan
living in South India said that following the protest, police were observed
throwing a badly burned body into a vehicle and driving away.
"More police than residents were present at the scene," he added.
'Martyrs' Road'
Separately, the London-based advocacy group Free Tibet said a witness
reported that "Chinese state security personnel quickly extinguished the
flames at the scene on the main road in Ngaba."
That road is now called Martyrs' Road by local residents because of the
large number of self-immolation protests that have taken place there, Free
Tibet said in its statement.
"The man who set fire to himself today was reported to be still alive, his
upper body badly injured, when security personnel drove him away in a
vehicle," Free Tibet said.
The burning brings to 45 the number of self-immolations by Tibetans
challenging Beijing's rule since the current wave of fiery protests began in
February 2009, with nearly all of the protests taking place in
Tibetan-populated provinces in western China.
The first self-immolation protest in the Tibetan capital was reported in
May, when two young Tibetan men set themselves ablaze in a central square of
the heavily guarded city.
As the world's media focuses on the discipline of Chinese athletes competing
in the Olympic Games now under way in London, "Chinese state repression is
driving Tibetans to set fire to themselves under a media blackout," Free
Tibet director Stephanie Brigden said in a statement on Monday.
"China is competing in the Olympic Games despite having broken every
commitment on human rights made during its bid for the 2008 games [held in
Beijing]," Brigden said.
"While we celebrate human endeavor, we must rigorously defend human rights,"
Brigden said.
Reported by Kunsang Tenzin, Chakmo Tso, and Rigdhen Dolma for RFA's Tibetan
service. Translated by Dorjee Damdul and Rigdhen Dolma. Written in English
by Richard Finney.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/new-08062012153250.html
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