Tibetan Farmer Dies in New Burning Protest
March 17, 2012—A farmer became the 30th Tibetan to self-immolate in protest over
Chinese rule on Saturday as he set himself ablaze and died in
northwestern Qinghai province, drawing several thousand Tibetans to his
funeral.
Sonam Thargyal drank kerosene and poured the fuel over
his cotton-padded body before setting himself alight, dying just minutes
later as his body was swiftly consumed by the flames, local Tibetan
sources and an exile group with contacts in the region said. He was 44.
The
self-immolation occurred early Saturday at the main road near the
Gangri Hotel and Thume Cultural Center in Qinghai's Rebkong (in Chinese,
Tongren) county in Malho (in Chinese, Huangnan) Tibetan Autonomous
Prefecture.
This is the second self-immolation in three days in
Rebkong, where Tibetans earlier this week also took to the streets to
protest a possible change in the medium of instruction in schools from
Tibetan to Chinese.
“The Tibetans who were at the scene attempted
to put out the flames but death was very fast because of the kerosene
inside and outside the body," Dorjee Wangchuk, a Tibetan exile spokesman
for the Rebkong community based in the Indian hill town of Dharamsala,
told RFA.
"He had wrapped cotton all around his body and fastened
it with iron wire. So, those who tried to put out the fire had no
chance to save him," a local Tibetan source said.
As he burned,
Thargyal, from the Shadrag nomadic area in Rebkong, shouted
slogans for an end to Chinese rule in Tibetan-populated areas, for the
return of exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama and for Tibetan
language rights.
“Before he set himself on fire, he went to a
Tibetan guest house owned by Shadrag nomadic community where he washed
his body and prostrated before the portrait of the Dalai Lama," Wangchuk
said.
The Dharamsala-based Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy said he was a farmer.
Funeral prayers
His body was taken to the Rongwo Gonchen Monastery where funeral prayers
were held, attended by several thousand people, including monks, local
Tibetan sources said.
Several hundred Chinese security forces
were at the scene but pulled back after being outnumbered by the
Tibetans. Senior monks kept the crowd under control, the sources said.
“Police
and paramilitary forces did surround the monastery and tried to
intervene but when the Tibetan crowd swelled, they withdrew," one local
source said.
The source claimed that more than 7,000 Tibetans were present at the funeral. The figure could not be independently confirmed.
Thargyal
was the 30th Tibetan to have self-immolated since February 2009 amid
tensions in Tibetan-populated provinces and in the Tibet Autonomous
Region following a Chinese security clampdown and the detention of
hundreds of monks since early last year.
The self-immolation came
just a day after a 20-year-old monk set himself ablaze in Sichuan
province's Ngaba (in Chinese, Aba) prefecture. He was beaten and taken
away by Chinese security forces.
Call
The wave of self-immolations prompted a call last week from
well-known Tibetan blogger Woeser and senior Tibetan religious leader
Arjia Rinpoche to end the fiery protests, saying that Tibetans opposed
to Chinese rule should instead "stay alive to struggle and push forward"
their goals.
Lobsang Sangay, the head of Tibet's exile
government in Dharamsala, said that while he strongly discouraged
self-immolations, the "fault lies squarely with the hardline leaders in
Beijing."
He accused Beijing of attempting over the last half-century "to annihilate the Tibetan people and its culture."
The
Chinese government however blamed the Dalai Lama for the
self-immolations, accusing the 76-year-old Buddhist leader and his
followers of plotting to create "turmoil" in Tibetan-inhabited areas.
Reported
by Lumbum Tash, Palden Gyal and Yangdon Demo for RFA's Tibetan service.
Translated by Karma Dorjee. Written in English by Parameswaran
Ponnudurai.
View this story online at: http://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/blaze-03172012102709.html
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