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Four Tibetans Self-Immolate
NOV. 26, 2012 — Four more Tibetans, including a nun, have self-immolated in protest
against Chinese rule, sources said Monday as armed police violently broke up a mass
Tibetan student demonstration over an official booklet which ridiculed the wave of burning
protests as acts of "stupidity."
Two of the self-immolations occurred in Gansu province and one took place in Sichuan
province on Monday while the fourth—involving a 17-year-old nun who died—was reported on
Sunday in Qinghai province, sources inside Tibet said.
The four incidents in Tibetan-populated areas bring the total number of burnings to 85 so
far as Tibetans step up the self-immolation protests to highlight opposition to Chinese
rule and demand the return of Tibet's spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, who is living
in exile in India.
The student protests occurred at a medical school in Chabcha (in Chinese, Gonghe) county
in the Tsolho (Hainan) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in Qinghai in response to the release
of an official booklet which ridiculed the Tibetan language as irrelevant, and condemned
the self-immolations, local residents said.
At least 20 students from the Tsolho Medical Institute were admitted to hospital after
being beaten by armed Chinese police who had surrounded and taken control of the school,
the local residents told Tibetan exile sources.
"The students of Tsolho Medical Institute protested against the distribution of a
book condemning the study of Tibetan language as devoid of relevance and the
self-immolations as acts of stupidity," one exile source told RFA's Tibetan
service.
Tsolho views
The book, entitled 10 Real Views of Tsolho Area , reflected the Tsolho local
government's perception of the Tibetan language and the burning protests, according to
the sources.
"The books were distributed in the area's schools. So the medical students of
Tsolho Medical Institute burned all the books and called for equality among nationalities
and freedom to study the Tibetan language," the source said. "They called for an
investigation into this issue and respect for justice."
"The armed police and paramilitary cracked down on the students and several student
protesters were seriously injured," the source added.
Earlier this month, several thousand Tibetan students took to the streets in Qinghai
province demanding greater rights.
The students shouted slogans calling for "equality of nationalities and freedom of
languages" and demanding the return of the Dalai Lama.
The demonstrators were from the Malho Teacher Training College and the Malho Vocational
Institute in Rongwo township, the capital of Rebgong county in the Malho (Huangnan)
Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, where self-immolations have intensified in recent weeks, as
well as the Qinghai Nationalities University in Qinghai's provincial capital Xining.
New burnings
The student protests on Monday came as four new self-immolations brought to 21 the total
number of burnings this month alone.
Teenage nun Sangay Dolmas, from the Mindrol Thagyal Ling monastery, set herself ablaze and
died Sunday in the Dokarmo subdivision in Rebgong (in Chinese, Tongren) county in Malho
prefecture, sources said.
On Monday, Kunchok Tsering, 18, self-immolated and died in Achok in Gansu province's
Sangchu (Xiahe) county in the Kanlho (Gannan) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture while ex-monk
Wang Gyal, 20, torched himself in Serthar (Seda) county in Sichuan province's Kardze
(Ganzi) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, sources from inside Tibet said.
Chinese police bundled Wang Gyal away from the scene soon after he set himself on fire,
the sources said.
"No details are available about his condition since the Chinese imposed stringent
restrictions in the area and the lines of communication are cut off," one source told
RFA.
Also on Monday, a 45-year-old Tibetan man, Gonpo Tsering, burned himself and died in Gansu
province's Luchu (Luqu) county in Kanlho prefecture, the sources said.
'Discriminatory' policies
Tibetan groups say self-immolation protests have intensified recently despite tighter
security measures because of Beijing's "discriminatory" policies and a
clampdown on monasteries.
"The Tibetans who are self-immolating—now in more rapid succession—have clearly not
been dissuaded by the security buildup or other means of official intimidation," Mary
Beth Markey, President of the International Campaign for Tibet, said at the weekend.
"Nonetheless, the authorities seem to be betting that further oppression will cower
or exhaust the will of future self-immolators," she said. "But unless and until
there is some initiative that can break through the cycle of repression and protest, I
think we all acknowledge that more Tibetans will be prepared to take the agonizing action
of self-immolation."
"And that is a terrible and unacceptable calculation,” she said.
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/protest-11262012131404.html
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