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China to offer social security to Tibetan clergy
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Nov 24, 2011


China will start paying pensions to monks and nuns in its Tibetan areas, the official Xinhua news agency said Thursday, after a run of self-immolations by Buddhist clergy protesting religious repression.

Beijing has come under mounting international criticism over its treatment of Tibetan Buddhists in recent months, with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton calling on China to "embrace a different path".

Eleven monks and nuns have set fire to themselves this year in what rights groups say is a sign of the desperation felt by Tibetan Buddhists in China, where some have been subjected to religious "reeducation" and even torture.

China, which has invested heavily in development in its ethnically Tibetan regions, maintains that it has brought modernisation and a better standard of living.

On Thursday, Xinhua said that from next year, monks and nuns over the age of 60 in Tibetan-inhabited regions would receive 120 yuan (about $19) a month in retirement pay.

Beginning next year, they will also be able to buy basic medical insurance for 60 yuan a year, which will cover 50,000 yuan per person per year in medical expenses, it added.

Previously, many monks and nuns were not allowed to participate in a national social security programme currently being implemented at the township-level across the nation, press reports said.

"It's a major approach to improve Tibetan people's livelihood," Xinhua quoted Wu Yingjie, deputy Communist Party secretary of the Tibet Autonomous Region, as saying.

The move is aimed at protecting the rights of monks and nuns by extending public services to their monasteries, he said.

The scheme extends to southwest China's Sichuan province, where 11 Buddhist monks and nuns this year set themselves on fire in protest of China's rule over the region.

Rights groups have said at least seven of the suicide attempts have succeeded, reflecting the desperation Tibetans feel over China's encroachment of the region and its heavy-handed religious and cultural policies.

Last year, the People's Daily reported that there were 46,000 Tibetan Buddhist monks and nuns in Tibet, with fewer than 3,000 of them over the age of 60.

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Tibet group says Nepal sent refugee back to China
Kathmandu (AFP) Nov 24, 2011 - Nepal forcibly repatriated a Tibetan refugee after he escaped from China, a Tibetan exile group said on Thursday, more than one year after a similar claim sparked international condemnation.

The refugee, a 20-year-old known as Tashi, crossed into western Nepal with five other Tibetans in September but was separated from them en route to Kathmandu, according to the International Campaign for Tibet (ICT).

"Tashi had been detained by Nepalese police after crossing the border and handed over to their Chinese counterparts on the Tibet side," the group, citing unnamed sources, said.

It added that it believed he was now being held in the Tibetan capital Lhasa.

When the last deportation was reported in June 2010, the United Nations refugee agency in Kathmandu had said it was "extremely concerned" by the move.

Hundreds of Tibetans make the difficult and dangerous journey to Nepal every year, fleeing political and religious repression in China, though their numbers have fallen sharply in the past few years.

Under an informal agreement between Nepal and the UN, they have previously been given safe passage to India where the Tibetan Buddhist spiritual leader the Dalai Lama lives in exile.

But US embassy cables released by whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks last year suggested that China paid Nepalese police to detain Tibetans as they crossed the border.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Liu Weimin told reporters in Beijing on Thursday that "as for the Tibetan who crossed the border illegally, I have no specific information."

"China will continue to work with Nepal to strengthen border control and maintain order in the border region," he said.

A spokesman for the home ministry in Nepal declined to comment.

Nepal, home to 20,000 Tibetan exiles, is under pressure from Beijing to stem the flow of Tibetans fleeing their homeland.



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Chinese state newspaper urges against 'revolt'
Beijing (AFP) Nov 24, 2011
China is edging closer to democracy partly because of the Internet but should avoid the deadly social unrest seen in countries such as Egypt, a state-run newspaper said in an editorial Thursday. Chinese are increasingly able to make their voices heard through blogs and micro-blogs and do not need to protest, the Global Times daily said in an editorial under the headline "democracy doesn't ha ... read more


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