Plea to Stop Self-Immolations Ignored
SEPT. 29, 2012— A Tibetan man self-immolated Saturday in protest against Chinese rule in
Qinghai province, ignoring new calls by hundreds of Tibetan exiles a
day earlier to end the burnings, according to sources inside Tibet.
Dressed
in full Tibetan traditional attire, the man set himself ablaze and
shouted slogans against Chinese rule in Dzatoe (Zaduo, in Chinese)
county in the Yushul (Yushu) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture before he was
taken away by Chinese security forces, the sources said.The
man, whose identity and other personal details were not immediately
available, was severely burnt when he was taken away, the sources quoted
eyewitnesses as saying.“While burning, he shouted various
slogans—calling for the independence of Tibet, inviting the Dalai Lama
and Karmapa (another senior Tibetan Buddhist figure) to Tibet, asking
for long life for the Dalai Lama and addressing Lobsang Sangay (the head
of the Tibetan government in exile) as the King of Tibet," one source
said, speaking on condition of anonymity."He walked past several
Tibetan shops in Dzatoe county's shopping complex with his body on
fire. The shopkeepers threw water on his burning body but his whole body
was engulfed in fire."Witnesses said they saw his internal
organs falling out at the height of the fire before he was bundled away by Chinese police, the source said.It was the 52nd
self-immolation protest since the wave of fiery protests began in
February 2009, with nearly all of the protests taking place in
Tibetan-populated provinces in western China. Most were protests
against Chinese rule and calling for the return of the Dalai Lama,
Tibet's spiritual leader who now lives in exile in Dharamsala, India.Shooting of movieSources
said the latest self-immolation could be linked to recent local Tibetan
protests against the shooting of a film by authorities wanting to
portray that Tibetans were happy under Chinese rule.“Few days
back, the Chinese authorities coerced the local Tibetans to participate
in a shooting of a movie themed on 'happiness in Tibet,'" a source was
quoted as saying by India's Tibet Express."The Tibetans resented
it and expressed their unwillingness to participate. This incident had
led to protest against the Chinese policy,” the source said. The
Dzatoe self-immolation came a day after more than 400 Tibetan exiles
from 26 countries meeting in India called for an end to self-immolation
protests by Tibetans challenging Chinese rule.The meeting held
in the hill-town of Dharamsala, seat of the Tibetan government in exile
and home to exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, expressed “grave
concern” over the burnings and urged Tibetans inside Tibet not to take
“drastic actions.”“Tibet is a thinly populated country, and in
the present situation losing even one life is a great loss for the
Tibetan people,” said one of 31 recommendations and resolutions adopted
by the delegates at the four-day meeting, the biggest in four years.
“Please preserve your lives in the future,” it said.Similar
expressions of concern from exile figures and from the Dalai Lama
himself over the burnings have gone largely unheeded in the past.Reported by 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/burn-09292012164851.html
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