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Tibetan monastery sealed off after self-immolation

China to execute Philippine drug mules: envoy
Manila (AFP) March 17, 2011 - Three Filipino drugs mules on death row in China will eventually be executed despite winning a rare reprieve amid intense Philippine lobbying, the Chinese ambassador in Manila said Thursday. "The verdict is a final verdict," ambassador Liu Jianchao told a news conference of the death sentences handed down to the two women and one man who were convicted of heroin smuggling in 2008. Philippine officials had argued the three were poor Filipinos who were duped into their crimes and should face long prison sentences instead of execution. "It has been ruled out," Liu said of the plea for life sentences. However he said no date had yet been set for their executions.

Vice President Jejomar Binay went to Beijing last month to seek mercy for the trio, who are among 227 Filipinos jailed for drugs offences in China. The trip led to the Supreme People's Court postponing the execution to an unspecified date. The 42-year-old Filipino man, a 32-year-old woman, and a 38-year-old woman were due to have been put to death last month. The Philippines skipped the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in Oslo in December honouring Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo in an attempt to encourage Beijing to spare the lives of five Filipinos on death row, believed to include the trio. China had been infuriated by the award of the prize to the jailed activist and pressured other countries not to attend the ceremony.

Ties between the two countries have been tested in other spheres recently. Last year eight tourists from Hong Kong were killed in a bungled rescue bid by Philippine police after they had been taken hostage aboard a bus in Manila. President Benigno Aquino sparked outrage in Hong Kong by later deciding to press only minor criminal charges against several police officials involved in the fiasco. The Philippines lodged a complaint with China this month after two Chinese vessels ordered a Filipino oil exploration boat to leave waters near the disputed Spratly islands in the South China Sea. China brushed off the protest and reiterated its sovereignty over the island chain and its adjacent waters.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 17, 2011
A Tibetan Buddhist monastery in southwestern China remained sealed off by police on Thursday, local residents said, after a young monk set himself on fire and died, triggering protests there.

Rights groups said the monk's self-immolation on Wednesday -- the third anniversary of anti-government unrest in the area -- and subsequent death sparked demonstrations near the Kirti monastery that were broken up by police.

The official Xinhua news agency, quoting a local government spokesman, later confirmed the self-immolation and death of the monk, identified as Phuntsog and said to be 24 years old. Rights groups put his age at 21.

"The crossroads to the monastery (is) blocked by police," an employee at a hotel near the monastery in Sichuan province told AFP.

"People are allowed to enter but the monks are not allowed to go out. Yesterday, the stores in this street were all closed," said the man, who declined to provide his name.

He added that he saw police beat two young men and a monk during the street protests.

A monk at the monastery said there were police outside the building, adding he could provide no further information as he was under the watchful eye of authorities.

"It's not convenient for me to explain this now. There are people beside me," he told AFP by phone.

The government spokesman blamed the death of the monk on treatment delays, saying police had rushed him to hospital but that other monks had forcibly taken him away and hidden him in the monastery before he died, Xinhua said.

But the International Campaign for Tibet (ICT) said the monks only took his dead body back to the monastery, as they did not want it to be passed on to Chinese authorities.

It said police extinguished the flames when the monk set himself ablaze, and were then seen beating him before he died.

Hundreds of monks and civilians then protested near the monastery, located in Aba county, referred to as Ngaba in Tibetan, it added, although residents contacted by AFP were unable to confirm the demonstrations were that large.

Police have since detained an unknown number of monks, according to the ICT.

Resentment against Chinese rule runs deep in Tibetan regions of China.

Many Tibetans are angry about what they view as increasing domination by China's majority Han ethnicity, and accuse the government of trying to dilute their culture.

Tibetan resentment spilled over into violent demonstrations in March 2008 in Tibet's capital Lhasa, which then spread to neighbouring areas. Authorities have increased security in the region since then.

China says Tibetan living standards have improved markedly in recent decades, pointing to the billions of dollars in spending on infrastructure and development projects.

According to ICT, this marks the second time a Kirti monk has set himself on fire since authorities imposed a broad crackdown across Tibet and neighbouring regions of China with large Tibetan populations following the 2008 unrest.

Another monk set himself on fire in 2009 but survived, according to reports.

Calls to the Aba county government and police were not answered.



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