Popular Tibetan Singer Detained
March 26, 2012— Chinese authorities have detained a popular Tibetan singer after he
released an album of songs dedicated to Tibet’s spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, sources
said Monday.
The 25-year-old singer, Ugyen Tenzin, was detained last month soon after the release of
his album titled, “An Unending Flow of My Heart’s Blood,” the sources said. Information
flow has been severely restricted from troubled Tibetan-populated areas in recent months.
Unconfirmed reports said that Ugyen Tenzin has been beaten in custody and is disabled.
“He released the album about a month ago, and he was arrested soon after that,” said a
source in New York who recently traveled to Tibet.
On the album, he had dedicated songs to the Dalai Lama as well as the third highest
ranking Buddhist leader the Karmapa, and the Kalon Tripa, the prime minister of the
Tibetan government-in-exile.
“It has thirteen songs, and some of songs are dedicated or in praise of the Dalai Lama,
Karmapa and [Kalon Tripa] Lobsang Sangay,” the source said.
Wave of protests
Ugyen Tenzin is from Sugma in Nangchen (in Chinese, Nangqian) county in Yulshul (Yushu)
prefecture of China's northwestern Qinghai, among three key Tibetan-populated
provinces where tensions have risen in recent months following a wave of protests
challenging Chinese rule and calling for the return of the Dalai Lama.
There have been 30 Tibetan self-immolations in protest against Beijing's rule in the
Tibetan-populated areas of Gansu, Sichuan, and Qinghai, triggering ramped-up security
across the areas as well as in the Tibet Autonomous Region.
Another Tibetan, Duldak Nyima, who is originally from the same county and now lives in New
York, said that he heard from a friend back home that Ugyen Tenzin had been arrested
because of the album.
“A friend of mine received the letter from Tibet few days ago, stating the singer was
arrested. I believe the arrest was connected to the release of the album.”
“Before the release of the album, [other Tibetans were worried about] the album’s
consequences and advised the singer against distributing it,” Duldak Nyima said.
“The singer also said in the DVD that he is doing this for the religious and political
cause of Tibet; he was … discussing the Tibet issue and Tibetan identity,” he said.
In one song on the album, part of which was posted on YouTube, the singer alludes to
Tibetan independence and repression: “The unity of the three provinces of Tibet, that is
what I have repressed in my heart for 50 years and what I am now going to share through
songs, until I breathe my last,” he says.
Maltreatment
A letter sent by an anonymous source in Tibet said that Ugyen Tenzin is being mistreated
in prison and is in ill health.
“None of his relatives or friends are allowed to reach him,” according to a copy of the
letter.
“We learned from the police sources that he was so severely tortured under detention that
his body and faculties are disabled. He was recovering from surgery prior to his detention
and the torture made it worse,” it said.
China has jailed scores of Tibetan writers, artists, singers, and educators for asserting
Tibetan national identity and civil rights since widespread protests swept the region in
2008.
Another popular Tibetan singer, Tashi Dhondup, was released from jail last year after
serving most of a 15-month sentence for recording songs calling for Tibetan independence.
The singer was convicted for violating laws by singing songs in support of Tibetan
independence and the Dalai Lama.
Reported by Norbu Damdul for RFA’s Tibetan service. Translated by Dorjee Damdul. Written
in English by Rachel Vandenbrink.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/song-03262012190715.html
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