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China detains Tibetan writer: report
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Feb 19, 2012


Police in southwest China have detained a Tibetan writer amid scores of detentions in the region hit by anti-Chinese protests, a US-based broadcaster Radio Free Asia said Sunday.

A team of 20 policemen took Gangkye Drubpa Kyab, 33, from his home in Seda county, Sichuan province on Wednesday last week, the broadcaster said, citing acquaintances of the popular author.

Writers, singers, and artists promoting Tibetan national identity and culture have frequently been detained by Chinese authorities, especially following protests against Chinese rule in 2008, it said.

Drubpa Kyab's disappearance comes amid a huge clampdown in Tibetan-inhabited areas following several bouts of deadly unrest, and ahead of the March anniversary of the Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama's flight into exile.

A government official in Seda told AFP that he was unaware of the arrest of Drubpa Kyab. Police in the county did not answer phones on Sunday.

According to Human Rights Watch, authorities have also detained large numbers of Tibetans for political re-education after they returned from a visit to India to listen to religious teachings.

The New York-based group quoted multiple sources as saying that since February 6, many recently-returned Tibetans had been detained in ad hoc centres in Lhasa, capital of Tibet, and other areas.

The group said the exact number of detainees was not known, but may run into the hundreds.

China has imposed virtual martial law in numerous Tibetan-inhabited regions as tensions have escalated, leading to the deaths last month of at least two people in clashes between police and locals in Sichuan, which borders Tibet.

Over the past year at least 20 Tibetans, many of them Buddhist monks, have set themselves on fire in protest at what they say is religious and cultural repression.

China accuses overseas groups seeking to split Tibet from the rest of China of fomenting the recent unrest, but rights groups say it stems from growing unhappiness among Tibetans over religious and cultural repression.

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Tibetan monk self-immolates to protest China: group
Washington (AFP) Feb 17, 2012 - A Tibetan monk burned himself to death on Friday in a protest against a crackdown on his monastery, in the latest of a wave of self-immolations against Beijing's rule, an exile group said.

Tamchoe Sangpo set himself alight after he unsuccessfully tried to persuade security forces to leave his monastery in Qinghai province, where Beijing was carrying out a "re-education" campaign after recent protests, London-based Free Tibet said.

The group said that Sangpo was in his late 30s and served on the Bongthak monastery's Democratic Management Committee, a government-backed body through which China tries to enforce its rules in Tibetan areas.

US-backed broadcaster Radio Free Asia, quoting exiled Tibetans, said that China had sent forces to the monastery in Haixi prefecture after ordering the monks not to hold a traditional prayer festival.

"Damchoe objected to this and told the Chinese officials that if they didn't withdraw their troops from the monastery, the monks should not be held responsible for any incident that might follow," Radio Free Asia quoted an India-based monk named Shingsa as saying.

At least 21 Tibetans, many of them Buddhist monks, have set fire to themselves in recent months to protest what they say is religious and cultural repression.

China has disputed accounts of the incidents and accuses overseas groups and Tibet's exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama of fomenting unrest.



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SINO DAILY
China detains Tibetans back from India: rights group
Beijing (AFP) Feb 17, 2012
China has detained large numbers of Tibetans for political re-education after they returned from a visit to India to listen to religious teachings, a leading rights group said. The New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) quoted multiple sources as saying that since February 6, many recently-returned Tibetans had been detained in ad hoc centres in Lhasa, capital of Tibet, and other areas. ... read more


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