Tibetan Self-Immolates, Draws Protests
JUNE 15 , 2012 — A Tibetan burned himself to death in protest against Chinese rule in
Qinghai province Friday, triggering large demonstrations and a security clampdown, local
sources said.
Tamdin Thar, from a nomadic family, self-immolated early morning in front of the police
station in Chentsa (Jianzha) county in the Huangnan (Malho) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture,
immediately drawing Chinese security forces who doused the flames and bundled him away,
the sources said.
On learning of his death, hundreds of Tibetans in the area thronged the Chentsa county
center and the police station to demand his body, sources in the county and in the Tibet
Autonomous Region told RFA. As the crowd swelled, the authorities complied and handed his
body, they said.
“Over 300 Tibetans protested at the county center demanding the custody of his body"
after it was learned that Tamdin Thar, whose age was given as between 40's and
60's, succumbed to serious burns, one source inside Tibet said.
“We went to the Chentsa county police station and demanded the body. Finally the
authorities gave us custody of his body," one protester, a lady, told RFA.
"However the presence of Chinese security forces is on the increase in this area,”
she added.
Another source, identified as Gyatso, a native of Chentsa county, said monks and others
have gathered for funeral prayers.
Thirty-ninth self-immolation
Tamdin Thar is the 39th Tibetan to have burned himself to protest Chinese rule and demand
the return of Tibet's exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama since a wave of
self-immolations began in February 2009.
The India-based Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy said Tamdin Thar belonged to
a nomadic family in Lowa village in Chentsathang township. He and his family moved to the
county due to the "nomad relocation policy" of the Chinese government, It quoted
a source as saying.
Nearly all the self-immolations so far have taken place in the Tibetan-populated provinces
in western China—Sichuan, Qinghai and Gansu—as Tibetans question Chinese policies which
they say are discriminatory and have robbed them of their rights.
The first self-immolation incident in Tibet's capital Lhasa was reported last month
when two young Tibetan men burned themselves in the heavily-guarded city, suggesting that
the protest movement to restore Tibetan rights is gaining momentum internally, much to the
chagrin of the Chinese authorities who have portrayed the burnings as isolated incidents
fueled by exile groups, according to experts.
The Dalai Lama has blamed Beijing's "totalitarian" and
"unrealistic" policies for the wave of self-immolations, saying the time has
come for the Chinese authorities to take a serious approach to resolving the Tibetan
problem.
Chinese authorities however have labeled the self-immolators as terrorists, outcasts,
criminals, and mentally ill people, and have blamed the Dalai Lama for encouraging the
burnings.
Reported by Lumbum Tashi and Kunsang Tenzin 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/burn-06152012084857.html
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