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US Senate urges China to end 'repressive' Tibet policy
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 30, 2012


The US Senate has urged China to ease restrictions on Tibetans, free prisoners and allow access by foreign media to address grievances following a wave of self-immolation protests.

In a voice vote without objections Thursday, the Senate approved a resolution that deplored "repressive policies targeting Tibetans" despite warnings from China, which said the bill interfered in its internal affairs.

The Senate called on China "to suspend implementation of religious control regulations" imposed since major protests in 2008 and to resume dialogue with representatives of the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader.

In the resolution, the Senate urged China to free all people who have been "arbitrarily detained; to cease the intimidation, harassment and detention of peaceful protesters; and to allow unrestricted access to journalists, foreign diplomats and international organizations to Tibet."

The resolution also urged barring China from opening further consulates in the United States until Beijing lets Washington start a mission in Tibet's capital Lhasa. However, the Senate measure is not legally binding.

At least 30 Tibetans have set themselves ablaze since last year, activists say, in dramatic protests against what rights groups say is China's religious and political repression against the mostly Buddhist people.

"The Senate has sent a clear message to the Tibetan people: we stand in solidarity with you as you strive to preserve your culture and practice your faith freely," said Senator Dianne Feinstein, a main sponsor of the resolution.

"It is my fervent hope that passage of this resolution will convince China to engage the Dalai Lama through dialogue and negotiation on addressing the legitimate grievances of all Tibetans," said Feinstein, a member of President Barack Obama's Democratic Party who represents California.

China held nine rounds of talks with the Dalai Lama's representatives between 2002 and 2010. But there was little visible progress, leading some Tibetans to believe that Beijing wants to drag out diplomacy until the globally revered 76-year-old Dalai Lama dies.

Senator Joe Lieberman, an independent who co-sponsored the resolution, said that the United States also wanted to congratulate exiled Tibetans for moving toward democracy with an election last year for prime minister.

"This is a critical moment for the Senate to reaffirm that the treatment of Tibetans in China and denial of fundamental human rights there is a source of deep concern for the United States," Lieberman said.

The Senate moved ahead despite criticism a day earlier by Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei, who said that Beijing was committed to all ethnic groups' rights and accused the US lawmakers of interference.

"We urge these congressmen to recognize facts, discard prejudice and stop interfering in China's internal affairs. They should do more things to contribute to China-US relations instead of the contrary," he said.

China contends that it has provided development to Tibet and accuses the Dalai Lama, a Buddhist monk who fled into exile in 1959 and later won the Nobel Peace Prize, of fomenting unrest.

In the latest case, a rights group and exiled monks said that a 20-year-old monk named Sherab burned to death on Wednesday after setting himself on fire in Sichuan province's Aba county.

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Tibetans arrested outside Chinese president's hotel
New Delhi (AFP) March 30, 2012 - New Delhi police detained another five Tibetan demonstrators on Friday outside the hotel of Chinese President Hu Jintao amid a raging debate over this week's crackdown on the exile population.

Hundreds of Tibetans have been rounded up by security forces in the Indian capital and placed in preventative detention in a heavy-handed police operation criticised by community leaders for its severity.

Tibetan areas have been flooded with police, with many locals confined to their homes, while demonstrations have been prohibited in areas near the Chinese president.

People of Nepalese origin and from India's far north-east have also complained they have been harassed by police because of their "Tibetan features" in apparent racial profiling.

"We are refugees but we enjoy every right to protest. The Delhi police is stopping every Tibetan who wants to stand up against the Chinese injustice," said Tenzing Norbu at the India-Tibet coordination centre in New Delhi.

"India has bilateral ties with China and we respect their diplomatic relations but India cannot impose unjust laws on Tibetans."

In the demonstration on Friday, five protestors with messages such as "Tibet Will be Free" daubed on their chests were bundled into nearby police vehicles at the luxury hotel where Hu has been staying since Wednesday.

Sujit Datta, a professor at the Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi who specialises in India-China relations, said the government should have engaged with Tibetan leaders beforehand rather than simply resorting to repression.

"The Indian government has mismanaged the Tibetan protest through ham-handed and inconsistent measures. They have showed no sensitivity towards the protestors," he said.

"The Tibetans are frustrated and the Indian government should recognise this."

Earlier in the week, a 27-year-old Tibetan exile set himself on fire in a demonstration against alleged Chinese abuses and the lack of religious freedom in Tibet. He later died after suffering more than 90 percent burns.

Hu left New Delhi early Friday after attending the fourth summit of the BRICS bloc of emerging nations which brings together China, Russia, India, Brazil and South Africa.

The presence of tens of thousands of Tibetans in India, as well as exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, is an irritant in the often prickly bilateral relations between India and China.

Activists and the Tibetan government in exile in the Indian hillstation of Dharamshala help highlight alleged human rights abuses in Tibet where media access is tightly restricted.

Chinese officials on Thursday blamed the Dalai Lama for the death of the Tibetan protester this week and said they "appreciated" the Indian government's actions to prevent disruption to the summit.



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A Chinese journalist was jailed in 2010 after criticising a prominent anti-gang campaign launched by Bo Xilai, the politician at the heart of a major scandal, a rights group said Friday. Bo, a rising star once tipped to join the top echelons of power in a key leadership transition later this year, was ousted as Communist Party leader of the megalopolis of Chongqing on March 15. On Friday ... read more


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