Tibetan Woman Torches Herself in Latest Self-Immolation
MAY 30 , 2012 — A Tibetan woman set herself ablaze and died Wednesday in China's
southwestern Sichuan province, exile sources said, as a wave of self-immolations against
Beijing's rule intensify.
The self-immolation came three days after two young Tibetan men burned themselves in
central Lhasa in the first such case in the heavily-guarded capital of the Tibet
Autonomous Region.
Rikyo, a 33-year-old mother of three children, torched herself on Wednesday afternoon near
a monastery in Dzamthang (in Chinese, Rangtang) county in the Ngaba ( Aba) Tibetan
Autonomous Prefecture, the epicenter of the burnings which began in March 2009.
Her self-immolation brings to 38 the number of burnings so far protesting against Chinese
rule in Tibetan-populated areas and calling for the return of Tibet's exiled spiritual
leader the Dalai Lama.
“Today a woman named Rikyo self-immolated in protest against Chinese rule and died,"
said Tsangyang Gyatso, head of the Jonang Buddhist Association in India's Dharamsala
hill town, where the Dalai Lama lives in exile.
"It happened around 3 p.m. close to Jonang Monastery in Dzamthang," he told RFA.
Same self-immolation site
It was the same site where two Tibetan cousins self-immolated about a month ago to protest
Chinese rule.
"Rikyo's body is being held at the Jonang monastery even though the police
arrived and demanded she be taken away.” Tsangyang Gyatso said.
Rikyo was from Tsangde village in the Barma subdivision of Dzamthang county. Her
father's name was given as Chuglo, and her mother's name as Rinlha,
Dzamthang was among at least three Sichuan counties where bloody protests occurred in
January in which rights and exile groups believe at least six were killed and 60 injured,
some critically.
Nearly all the self-immolations so far had taken place in Sichuan and the two other
Tibetan-populated provinces of western China—Qinghai and Gansu—as Tibetans questioned
Chinese policies which they say are discriminatory and have robbed them of their rights.
Sunday's Lhasa self-immolations however suggested 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 [Lhasa] self-immolations show that the protests are now widespread and have
covered all of the Tibetan region, from the Tibet Autonomous Region to the parts of Tibet
that were merged with the Chinese provinces of Qinghai, Sichuan, and Gansu," said
Mohan Malik, professor of Asian security at the Hawaii-based Asia-Pacific Center for
Security Studies.
Tibetans in Lhasa mostly stayed indoors this week amid a security crackdown following the
weekend self-immolations, residents said.
Checkpoints manned by Chinese security forces have been set up at key area near the
popular Jokhang temple located on Barkhor Square, the site of Sunday's
self-immolations, and Tibetans passing through them are thoroughly screened, they said.
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 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-05302012085244.html
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