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Seven released in Nyagchuka, situation "tense"

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Peter Terpstra

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Dec 19, 2009, 5:13:53 PM12/19/09
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Seven released in Nyagchuka, situation "tense"
Phayul[Friday, December 18, 2009 20:55]
By Kalsang Rinchen

Dharamsala, December 18 – Seven Tibetans arrested earlier for holding protest
demonstration on December 5 to petition the release of a jailed Tibetan
religious figure in Tibet’s Nyagchuka County had been released Tuesday, the
Voice of Tibet radio service reported today citing a source with contacts in
the region.

Tsering Dorjee, a Tibetan residing in exile, told the radio service that the
seven Tibetans had been beaten up severely in detention, and the condition of
one of them was “extremely serious" with a head injury and is receiving
treatment in a hospital at a place called Gara (spelled as pronounced). The
seven are Tsering Sangpo, Jinpa, Lhamo Choedup, Tsagey Atha, Jamdrel and two
others, said Dorjee.

Around twenty Tibetans are still held in detention following protests by
hundreds of local Tibetans from nearby villages demanding the release of
Trulku Tenzin Delek Rinpoche, currently serving life sentence in Mianyang
Prison in Sichuan.

According to Dorjee, the local Tibetans suspect that the authorities are
withholding the detained Tibetans’ release as they might have been “severely
tortured and beaten” and that their condition might provoke reprisal from
relatives and locals.

Despite the release of the seven Tibetans the situation in Nyagchuka County
continues to be grim with the authorities deploying armed paramilitary forces
and police in the areas affected by the protests, the International Campaign
for Tibet said in a report citing exile sources with contacts in the region.

The Tibetans in Nyakchuka County argue that Tenzin Delek Rinpoche had been
jailed in a “fabricated” case and that there is no proof with the authorities
against Rinpoche.

The authorities offered some concessions as a result of requests by some local
Buddhist leaders who feared the Tibetans might rise up in protest. However, it
is not known if the Chinese authorities will actually implement the
concessions, according to the ICT.

One source cited by ICT said that the absence of Trulku Tenzin Delek (a
reincarnated Lama revered by Tibetan Buddhists), there has been a rise in the
number of “thieves, trouble makers, hunters and alcoholics in their region”
and that “there was nothing the government could do to improve the situation”
without Rinpoche being released.

He was hugely popular for his humanitarian works including setting up of
schools, elderly people’s homes, working with local officials to protect
forests and his efforts to preserve Tibetan culture.

On December 2 2002, the Kardze Intermediate People's Court in the Kardze
Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province, sentenced Lobsang Dhondup, a
relative of Tenzin Delek Rinpoche, to death for "inciting separatism",
"causing explosions" and "illegal possession of guns and ammunition". He was
executed on January 26, 2003, despite international outcry. On the same day,
Tenzin Delek Rinpoche was sentenced to death with a two year reprieve for
"causing explosions" and "inciting separatism". Tenzin Delek Rinpoche, based
at a monastery in nomad-dominated Othok, had his sentence commuted to life in
2005.

http://www.phayul.com/news/article.aspx?id=26236&article=Seven+released+in+Nyagchuka,
+situation+"tense"

--
Amnesty International Report 2009 on China:
http://report2009.amnesty.org/en/regions/asia-pacific/china

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