Nun Self-Immolates; Buildings Torched
February 11, 2012 —A teenage Tibetan Buddhist nun set herself on fire on Saturday in the
latest self-immolation against Chinese rule as protesters torched government buildings in
southwestern Sichuan province, exile sources said.
Tenzin Choedron, aged 18 and from the Mamo Nunnery in the Ngaba (Aba, in Chinese) Tibetan
Autonomous Prefecture, shouted slogans against the Chinese government as she was burning
before security forces hauled her away, the sources said, quoting local contacts.
Choedron was the 23rd Tibetan—and the third nun—to have self-immolated since February 2009
when Beijing stepped up a clampdown on monasteries and rounded up hundreds of protesting
monks.
Thirteen of the 23 who self-immolated are known to have died following their protests,
according to advocacy group International Campaign for Tibet.
Choedron is believed to have suffered serious burns
"She did not die on the spot, but soldiers and police came immediately and took her
away, towards Barkham [Ma'erkang, in Chinese, county]," monks Losang Yeshe and
Kanyag Tsering said from India's hill town Dharamsala, where Tibet's spiritual
leader the Dalai Lama lives.
"After that, soldiers surrounded the nunnery and sealed it off, and nothing more is
known of the situation inside," the monks said in a statement to RFA.
Choedron was described by local Tibetans as quiet, hardworking and courageous.
"She followed the rules, studied hard, and got excellent grades. She was smart as
well as brave," Yeshe and Tsering said.
Hardening crackdown
Saturday's self-immolation capped a week of massive protests and tensions in
Tibetan-populated Chinese provinces that signaled a hardening crackdown by Chinese
authorities on dissent by Tibetans.
On Thursday, security forces shot and killed a Tibetan monk and his brother who had been
involved in protests against Chinese rule in Draggo (Luhuo, in Chinese) county in Sichuan
province.
On the same day, an unidentified Tibetan monk had self-immolated to protest Tibetans'
plight in neighboring Qinghai province's Tridu (Chenduo, in Chinese) county, the scene
of protests against Chinese rule by several thousand Tibetans on Wednesday.
Sources also said on Saturday that Tibetan protesters had set fire to two government
buildings this week in Kardze (Ganzi) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan to protest
Chinese rule.
The suspected arsons occurred mid-week in government buildings in Nangdo town in Dege
county and Zame town in Kardze county, a Tibetan source in Australia said on Saturday,
citing local contacts.
The building in Zame was completely razed but fire in the other building in Nangdo was put
out quickly after a Tibetan reported the incident to the authorities. No one was injured
and there had been no arrests.
Tensions rose in Nangdo after a poster in Chinese appeared, warning of death to the
Tibetan who reported the arson to the authorities, the source said.
Nunnery
Ngaba, where nun Choedron self-immolated Saturday, has been the scene of persistent
protests over the last year.
Her Mamo or Dechen Choekorling Nunnery houses 350 nuns and is one of the biggest nunneries
in Ngaba. It is close to the Kirti monastery which has been under continuous siege by
Chinese security forces and from where hundreds of monks have been taken away by security
forces last year.
Nuns from Mamo nunnery had been in the forefront of protests against Chinese rule. They
took part in a protest in March 2008 and faced harsh questioning from Chinese security
forces, according to exile monks. A few of them were arrested, and among them three were
sent to jail for three to four years, they said.
Reported by Nurbu Damdul and Guru Choegyi for RFA's Tibetan service. Translation by
Karma Dorjee. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/nun-02112012160338.html
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