atatwolf
BANNED
- Joined
- Jul 15, 2012
- Messages
- 6,965
- Reaction score
- -19
- Country
- Location
DHARAMSHALA: Freedom House, a prominent US-based advocacy group that conducts research on democracy, political freedom and human rights, has published its latest report on China, documenting an increase in repression and suppression of human rights under the new leadership of President Xi Jinping in Tibet and other parts of China.
In the report entitled ‘The Politburo’s Predicament’ released on Tuesday, the rights group highlights the huge resources that China concentrates on the subject of Tibet and Xinjiang.
“The suppression of antigovernment protests and ethnic clashes in Tibet and Xinjiang beginning in 2008 and 2009 included new rounds of abductions, imprisonment, torture, and executions, in some instances affecting hundreds or thousands of people at a time,” the report said.
“Official statistics gathered by the Duihua Foundation illustrate a dramatic rise in the number of trials and indictments for “endangering state security” beginning in 2008, with many of those punished believed to be Tibetans and Uighurs.”
The report also noted the Chinese government’s harsh response to the wave of Tibetan self-immolation protests that has swept Tibet since 2009.
“As self-immolations reached their peak in November 2012 and then continued periodically, official reprisals for those involved intensified. In a form of collective punishment, a regulation allowed those found to have assisted a self-immolator to be charged with homicide.”
“A late 2013 crackdown in one county alone led to at least 58 detentions and 15 prison sentences of up to 18 years. At least two monks, including a popular religious leader, were beaten to death in custody in 2013 within weeks of their detention,” Freedom House said in their report.
However, despite the Chinese government’s intensified repression, the rights group argues that resistance from the Tibetan people towards government efforts to exert control has intensified.
“For persecuted religious and ethnic groups, the risks of even quiet resistance are significant given the harsh repression they face. Yet such resistance is widespread. Large numbers of Tibetans continue to keep an image of the Dalai Lama in their possession despite the threat of punishment and “patriotic education” campaigns that urge them to denounce their revered spiritual leader,” the report said.
Some of the prominent topics targeted for censorship in China include a contingent of long-standing taboos, noted the Freedom House report. Taboo topics included the writings of prominent dissidents, unfavorable coverage of CCP leaders, calls for greater autonomy in Tibet and Xinjiang, Taiwanese independence and democracy, and the Falun Gong spiritual group.
Central Tibetan Administration
"The exhibition is in three parts. The one part is the India and Tibet relations. We want to say that India and Tibet has a very long-tide since from 7th century," Vangdu said.
"Second part of the exhibition is the self-immolation in Tibet that has been taking place since 2008. And then the third part of the exhibition is the three commitments of Dalai Lama. We are exhibiting these three parts to the Indian students to make aware of the Tibet issue, Tibet culture and what's going inside Tibet due to the Chinese repressive policy," he added.
The Central Tibetan Administration in-exile in Dharamsala has repeatedly urged the Chinese authorities in Tibet to address the genuine grievances of the Tibetan people to alleviate their sufferings and to end its political repression, religious persecution, cultural assimilation, economic marginalization and environmental destruction in Tibet, which remain the main causes of the Tibetan self-immolation protests.
In 2008, months before the Olympic Games in Beijing, demonstrations about the perceived lack of freedoms for Tibetans broke out across the region, eliciting a brutal crackdown. In 2012, more than 80 Tibetans staged such fiery protests, according to rights groups. Most of them are believed to have died.
Meanwhile, a student at the exhibition, Uday Bhatt, said with the exhibition they want to bring their fight for peace and freedom in front of the world.
"In the exhibition we saw the present situation of Tibet and the relation between India and Tibet," said Bhatt.
Exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama has lived in India since fleeing a failed uprising against Chinese rule of his homeland in 1959.
Human rights activists say China tramples on religious freedom and culture in Tibet, which it has ruled strictly since People's Liberation Army troops "peacefully liberated" the region in 1950.
China rejects such criticism, saying its rule ended serfdom in Tibet and brought development to a backward, poverty-stricken region.
Tibet students display China's oppression through photo exhibition | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis
In the report entitled ‘The Politburo’s Predicament’ released on Tuesday, the rights group highlights the huge resources that China concentrates on the subject of Tibet and Xinjiang.
“The suppression of antigovernment protests and ethnic clashes in Tibet and Xinjiang beginning in 2008 and 2009 included new rounds of abductions, imprisonment, torture, and executions, in some instances affecting hundreds or thousands of people at a time,” the report said.
“Official statistics gathered by the Duihua Foundation illustrate a dramatic rise in the number of trials and indictments for “endangering state security” beginning in 2008, with many of those punished believed to be Tibetans and Uighurs.”
The report also noted the Chinese government’s harsh response to the wave of Tibetan self-immolation protests that has swept Tibet since 2009.
“As self-immolations reached their peak in November 2012 and then continued periodically, official reprisals for those involved intensified. In a form of collective punishment, a regulation allowed those found to have assisted a self-immolator to be charged with homicide.”
“A late 2013 crackdown in one county alone led to at least 58 detentions and 15 prison sentences of up to 18 years. At least two monks, including a popular religious leader, were beaten to death in custody in 2013 within weeks of their detention,” Freedom House said in their report.
However, despite the Chinese government’s intensified repression, the rights group argues that resistance from the Tibetan people towards government efforts to exert control has intensified.
“For persecuted religious and ethnic groups, the risks of even quiet resistance are significant given the harsh repression they face. Yet such resistance is widespread. Large numbers of Tibetans continue to keep an image of the Dalai Lama in their possession despite the threat of punishment and “patriotic education” campaigns that urge them to denounce their revered spiritual leader,” the report said.
Some of the prominent topics targeted for censorship in China include a contingent of long-standing taboos, noted the Freedom House report. Taboo topics included the writings of prominent dissidents, unfavorable coverage of CCP leaders, calls for greater autonomy in Tibet and Xinjiang, Taiwanese independence and democracy, and the Falun Gong spiritual group.
Central Tibetan Administration
"The exhibition is in three parts. The one part is the India and Tibet relations. We want to say that India and Tibet has a very long-tide since from 7th century," Vangdu said.
"Second part of the exhibition is the self-immolation in Tibet that has been taking place since 2008. And then the third part of the exhibition is the three commitments of Dalai Lama. We are exhibiting these three parts to the Indian students to make aware of the Tibet issue, Tibet culture and what's going inside Tibet due to the Chinese repressive policy," he added.
The Central Tibetan Administration in-exile in Dharamsala has repeatedly urged the Chinese authorities in Tibet to address the genuine grievances of the Tibetan people to alleviate their sufferings and to end its political repression, religious persecution, cultural assimilation, economic marginalization and environmental destruction in Tibet, which remain the main causes of the Tibetan self-immolation protests.
In 2008, months before the Olympic Games in Beijing, demonstrations about the perceived lack of freedoms for Tibetans broke out across the region, eliciting a brutal crackdown. In 2012, more than 80 Tibetans staged such fiery protests, according to rights groups. Most of them are believed to have died.
Meanwhile, a student at the exhibition, Uday Bhatt, said with the exhibition they want to bring their fight for peace and freedom in front of the world.
"In the exhibition we saw the present situation of Tibet and the relation between India and Tibet," said Bhatt.
Exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama has lived in India since fleeing a failed uprising against Chinese rule of his homeland in 1959.
Human rights activists say China tramples on religious freedom and culture in Tibet, which it has ruled strictly since People's Liberation Army troops "peacefully liberated" the region in 1950.
China rejects such criticism, saying its rule ended serfdom in Tibet and brought development to a backward, poverty-stricken region.
Tibet students display China's oppression through photo exhibition | Latest News & Updates at Daily News & Analysis