Tibetans Drown in Escape Attempt

The five men had planned to self-immolate in a protest against rule by Beijing.
2012-12-14
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A map of Driru county in Nagchu (Naqu) prefecture in Tibet.
A map of Driru county in Nagchu (Naqu) prefecture in Tibet.
RFA

Five Tibetans drowned earlier this week in a restive central Tibetan county while escaping police after authorities foiled their plan to self-immolate in a challenge to Chinese rule, according to a local source.

Names of the dead and detained were not immediately available, but the planned burnings would have been the second self-immolation protest known to have occurred in Driru county in the Nagchu prefecture of the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR).

So far, 95 Tibetans have set themselves ablaze to protest Chinese rule since the wave of fiery protests began in February 2009, with most occurring in Tibetan-populated areas of the Chinese provinces of Sichuan, Qinghai, and Gansu.

“On Dec. 9, on the eve of World Human Rights Day, seven Tibetans from Balkar town in Driru planned to self-immolate in a protest against China’s policies in Tibet,” a caller from the area told RFA’s Tibetan service.

Chinese police discovered the plan and attempted to take the protesters into custody, but the Tibetans “ran away,” the caller said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“The Chinese pursued them and managed to detain two, but the other five refused to surrender and jumped into a river and died,” he said.

Leaflets call for freedom

Leaflets calling for Tibetan freedom appeared the next day posted on government buildings and on stone posts in local grasslands, the source said.

“We are ready to give our lives for the cause of freedom,” said the leaflets, which were written in Tibetan.

The leaflets called for the return to Tibet of exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, for the release of the Panchen Lama and for the unity of Tibet’s three historical regions of Central Tibet, Kham, and Amdo.

The Panchen Lama, Tibet's second-highest religious figure, was detained by Chinese authorities as a child in 1995 after being named to his position by the Dalai Lama, and another child—widely regarded by Tibetans as a Chinese puppet—was installed in his place.

The leaflets also acknowledged the “sacrifices of those heroic Tibetans” who have already died in protests against Beijing’s rule.

Reached for comment, Driru county police officers refused to speak to a reporter on Friday about the reported drownings.

But a woman answering the phone at a Nagchu prefecture government office said, “Nothing like this has happened.”

Asked about the self-immolation in October of a Driru resident named Gudrub, the woman replied, “We can’t talk about things like that.”

'Unity, solidarity'

Gudrub, who died in a self-immolation protest in a Driru marketplace on Oct. 4, shouted slogans calling for Tibetan freedom and the return of the Dalai Lama after he set himself ablaze.

He left a written statement calling on the Tibetan people to “foster unity and solidarity” and not “lose courage” in the struggle for Tibetan freedom, according to a former classmate now living Australia.

Tibetans in Driru have been in the forefront of opposition to Chinese rule in the TAR, with monks and nuns protesting and abandoning monasteries in order to defy “intrusive” new Chinese regulations.

China's clampdown in the Driru area has been "very stringent, with several hundred Tibetans detained and many severely tortured," RFA's source in the area said.

"Over 30 Tibetans have been detained just from Gudrub's hometown alone," he said.

Reported by Yangdon Demo for RFA’s Tibetan service. Translated by Karma Dorjee. Written in English by Richard Finney.

Comments (6)
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Anonymous Reader

dun't be silly khymer

Jan 12, 2013 03:38 AM

Mohamjip

Kmer, please don't say that the white world doesn't care. I care, and a lot of us are doing what we can to change what is happening. By saying "the white world don't care much about us" is being very disrespectful to those of us in the white world who are working very hard. Your thinking is not the Buddha way.

Dec 16, 2012 12:48 PM

Anonymous Reader

Maybe the evil is winning.....maybe the righteous are loosing as double-standard world is not taking their hands out of warm pocket.....maybe it is the time to think about joining the side of evil...to let the evil rule this world of coward humans. May the departed souls rest in peace...wish we have oil, wish we are muslim...that world will rescue us in a flick of second

Dec 15, 2012 02:40 PM

Alex

from USA

So even in the 21st century there are still people giving up their lives for a theocracy. Yes I would call the Dalai Lama a cult!

Dec 15, 2012 03:15 AM

Tenzin

from Minneapolis

Dalai Lama is not the cult, it is the people resistance to the Chinese rules and defiance against chinese rule and their first wish is for the turn of Dalai Lama, whom they consider is their true leader and spiritual teacher rather than a cult, please mind you language and learn more before putting negative comments and disrespecting the lives that these brave Tibetans have given so that others can live in peace. Cults would be to take some ones else lives else well. Got that?

Dec 17, 2012 08:20 PM

khmer

from phnom penh

So sorry my dear tibetans....the world don't see us well....especially the white world don't care much about us....they enjoy to see our tragedy, they care their interests first before they come to us. Immolation is not the way, live on to struggle is the only buddism's way... we're not a islamism.

Dec 14, 2012 06:15 PM

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