Popular Tibetan Writer Detained
February 18, 2012 — Chinese authorities have detained a popular Tibetan writer in a county
in southwestern Sichuan province which had been rocked by bloody protests, writers and
exile sources said Saturday.
A team of 20 police officers went to the residence of Gangkye Drubpa Kyab, 33, in Serthar
(in Chinese, Seda) county just before midnight on Feb. 15 and took him away, according to
Beijing-based Tibetan writer Woeser.
"His present condition and place of detention is unknown," she told RFA.
The detention came amid tensions in Tibetan-populated areas in Chinese provinces on the
back of self-immolations and protests against Chinese rule and the arrest of scores, if
not hundreds, of Tibetans.
Serthar was among three counties in Sichuan province where Tibetans protested in late
January and in which rights and exile groups believe at least six were killed and 60
injured, some critically.
The protest in Serthar was sparked by posters calling for more self-immolations and
cautioning Tibetans not to allow the bodies of those who set themselves ablaze to be taken
away by Chinese security forces, sources had said.
Popular writings
Drubpa Kyab was a "well known" writer among Tibetans, Woeser said. Among his
popular compositions were "Call of Fate," "Pain of This Era" and
"Today’s Tear of Pain."
He had worked as a teacher in Serthar for almost a decade.
His wife, Wangchuk Lhamo, challenged the police team to show legal documents for detaining
him and conducting a search on their home "but they had nothing to show,” an exile
source with contacts in Serthar told RFA.
“The Chinese police team searched his house but found nothing incriminating," the
source said.
The police team was led by the head of the Serthar police station and the local secret
service chief, the source said.
Another detention
Drubpa Kyab's detention comes two weeks after a popular advocate of Tibet’s
traditional culture and language was said to have been detained by Chinese authorities.
Dawa Dorje, in his late 20's and a government researcher in Nagchu (in Chinese, Naqu)
prefecture in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), was believed detained after expressing
concern over the closure of Tibetan monasteries, sources said.
His family had not heard from him since he returned to Tibet after organizing a conference
promoting Tibetan culture in protest-hit Sichuan but his friends believe Chinese
authorities have detained him.
Writers, singers, and artists promoting Tibetan national identity and culture have
frequently been detained by Chinese authorities, with many handed long jail terms,
following region-wide protests against Chinese rule that swept Tibetan areas in 2008.
Reported by Lobsang Chophel, Guru Choegyi and Chakmo Tso 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/writer-02182012161437.html
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