Angry Tibetans Parade Corpse after Latest Self-immolation Protest
January 8, 2011-Hundreds of angry Tibetans forced Chinese authorities on
Sunday to return the body of a monk who self-immolated, parading the corpse
in the streets in China's western Qinghai province, witnesses said.
Sopa, a respected 42-year-old monk, set himself on fire and died in the town
center of Darlag (in Chinese, Dari) county in Golog Tibetan Autonomous
Prefecture after shouting slogans calling for Tibet's freedom and the long
life of Tibet's spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, they said.
Before his self-immolation, he climbed a local hill, burned incense, prayed,
and then distributed several leaflets in which he wrote that he was
performing the deadly act "not for his personal glory but for Tibet and the
happiness of Tibetans," a source from inside Tibet told RFA.
"The Tibetans should not lose their determination. The day of happiness will
come for sure. For the Dalai Lama to live long, the Tibetans should not lose
track of their path," Sopa wrote, according to the source.
Dressed in the yellow outer gown of an ordained monk, he set himself alight
at around 6 a.m. after he "drank and threw kerosene all over his body."
"His body exploded in pieces [and the remains were] taken away by police,"
the source said.
Several hundred Tibetans marched to the police station to demand his
remains, and when their request was denied, "the protesters smashed windows
and doors of the local police station," another source said.
When the police finally relented and handed over Sopa's remains, the
protesters paraded the body in the streets, sources said.
"Only the head and chest parts [of the body] are intact, the rest were in
pieces when Tibetans received the remains from the police," a third source
said.
High-ranking lama
Sopa was a Rinpoche, an honorific used in Tibetan Buddhism for lamas and
other high-ranking or respected teachers. He served in a monastery in
Darlag.
Chinese authorities tightened security after the self-immolation, deploying
additional security forces from the main town of Golog.
Sources said Tibetans planned to organized a large prayer session comprising
about 2,000 people at Sopa's monastery.
"Now it's difficult to reach the Darlag area by phone," a source said.
Sopa's death came after two Tibetans set themselves on fire Friday in
restive Ngaba (in Chinese, Aba) prefecture in China's Sichuan province,
protesting against Chinese rule and calling for the return of the Dalai Lama
to Tibet.
One of them, a monk, is believed to have died.
Fifteen Tibetans have self-immolated since March last year and rights groups
say the incidents underscore the "desperate" situation facing Tibetans as
Chinese authorities pursue a security clampdown.
"These latest self-immolations confirm that what we are currently witnessing
in Tibet is a sustained and profound rejection of the Chinese occupation,"
Free Tibet Director Stephanie Brigden said on Friday.
"It is a damning indictment of the international community that 14 people,
in different parts of Tibet, have now chosen to set themselves on fire and
the international community has failed to respond."
"We can only expect that such acts of protest will continue for as long as
world leaders turn a blind eye to the desperate situation in Tibet," she
said.
Kalachakra
The self-immolations came as tens of thousands of Buddhist pilgrims from
around the world traveled this week to Bodhgaya, a town in northern India,
to hear the Dalai Lama give the "Kalachakra" religious teachings.
At least 9,000 Tibetans traveling on Chinese passports, along with an
estimated 1,200 Chinese Buddhists from the mainland, are among those who
have registered with event authorities.
Tensions in the Tibet Autonomous Region and in Tibetan-populated areas in
China's provinces have not subsided since anti-China protests swept through
the Tibetan Plateau in March 2008.
Chinese authorities have blamed the Dalai Lama for the tense situation,
saying he is encouraging the self-immolations, which run contrary to
Buddhist teachings.
But the Dalai Lama shot back, blaming China's "ruthless and illogical"
policy towards Tibet.
He called on the Chinese government to change its "repressive" policies in
Tibet, citing the crackdown on monasteries and policies curtailing use of
the Tibetan language.
Reported by Dolkar and Chakmo Tso for RFA's Tibetan service. Translated by
Karma Dorjee. Written in English by Parameswaran Ponnudurai and Rachel
Vandenbrink.
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