From the Los Angeles Times
Tibetan monks protest Chinese rule
The demonstrations unnerve Beijing, which is
struggling to contain growing pre-Olympics criticism of its human
rights record.
By Barbara Demick
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 13, 2008
BEIJING —
The largest pro-independence demonstrations in the Tibetan capital in
nearly two decades have rattled the Chinese government as it struggles
to contain growing criticism of its human rights record in the run-up
to the 2008 Summer Olympics.
More than 500 Buddhist monks participated in marches toward the
center of Lhasa, shouting slogans against China's 57-year rule over
Tibet. Two of Tibet's three most important monasteries participated in
the protests Monday and Tuesday. Monks at the third, the remote Ganden
Monastery in the mountains 29 miles from the capital, were said to have
staged their own demonstration Wednesday, said Robert Barnett, a Tibet
scholar at Columbia University in New York.
"It is an astonishing development after 20 years that this is
happening," Barnett said.
Activists quoting witnesses in Lhasa said Chinese security forces were
setting up roadblocks around the city.
In another security move, China notified tour operators this week that
Mt. Everest would be closed to climbers this year until May 10.
Although the letter of notification cited environmental concerns,
analysts say the Chinese want to avoid a repeat of an incident last
year, when climbers made a video of themselves on Everest with a "Free
Tibet" banner, and posted it on the Internet.
China has ruled Tibet since 1951, and critics say it has stifled
its culture, language and religion. This week's protests marked the
March 10 anniversary of a failed 1959 uprising against China.
Separately, several hundred Tibetan exiles tried to march into Tibet
from the north Indian town of Dharamsala, where the Dalai Lama presides
over a government in exile. Some were arrested.
The U.S.-funded Radio Free Asia's Tibetan-language service
reported that it received a phone call Wednesday from a witness in the
Ganden Monastery who said monks were demonstrating. The service also
reported fresh accounts of a protest Tuesday in which several hundred
monks were seen marching near a police station.
"There were probably a couple of thousand armed police. . . . Police
fired tear gas into the crowd," the witness was quoted as saying.
Although some witnesses said they heard gunshots, no serious injuries
were reported.
The blockades kept the monks far from the city center, where they had
hoped to demonstrate.
But the marches clearly rattled the Chinese government, which has
been trying to fend off human rights activists from all corners of the
globe using the Summer Olympics as a platform for their causes.
"The Olympic charter requires that the Olympic Games not be
politicized," Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said at a news
conference Wednesday in Beijing.
He also criticized the Dalai Lama, saying the Tibetan spiritual
leader's "conspiracy to split Tibet from China and his secessionist
attempt is doomed to fail," according to the official New China News
Agency.
Tibet is a potentially explosive issue for the Chinese in this
sensitive year because it commands a large international following with
high celebrity interest. The Chinese were shocked last month when
Icelandic singer Bjork shouted "Tibet, Tibet!" from a stage in Shanghai
after performing her song, "Declare Independence."
Kate Saunders, an official of London-based Free Tibet, said, "We
want to use the Olympics as a means of leverage on China to press for
positive change."
Since 1988, when a monk was shot to death for unfurling a Tibetan
flag in Lhasa, the Chinese have kept such a large paramilitary presence
in Tibet that protests against their rule have been virtually
impossible.
Barnett said this week's events were linked to the Olympics and to
resentments that have been pent up since 2005, when Zhang Qingli, a
confidant of President Hu Jintao, took over as head of the Communist
Party in Tibet.
"The control of Tibet has become more aggressive in the way
they've controlled religion and the aggressive language they're using
about the Dalai Lama," Barnett said. "And deciding to route the Olympic
torch through Tibet was really provocative. They were setting
themselves up for trouble."
Barnett noted, however, that the protests this week were handled
with more sophistication than previously by the Chinese People's Armed
Police force, which is stationed in Tibet. In the 1980s, brutality
toward the monks inflamed the general population, leading to riots.
The State Department this year dropped China from its list of
worst abusers of human rights, but accusations continue. Human Rights
Watch issued a report Wednesday charging the Chinese with
systematically abusing migrant workers involved in Beijing's
pre-Olympics construction boom.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times