Payday loans
Both the applications are very alike payday loans How much do you repay the loan
tibet-post-header
You are here: Home News Tibet Another Self-Immolation in Tibet: Brings Total to 48 since 2009

Another Self-Immolation in Tibet: Brings Total to 48 since 2009

E-mail Print
8august2012-002Dharamshala: - A media coordinator in Kirti monastery, Dharamshala- Kanyag Tsering-has told The Tibet Post International that there has been another self-immolation but he added that ''as of now [there are] very little details".

There have been several such incidents in the region in recent months and due to limitations imposed by the Chinese authorities foreign media are banned from reporting, making reports of such incidents very difficult to verify.

However, it is believed that the self-immolator was a male monk from called Lobsang Tseltrim from Kirti Monastery in Kirti Ma township of Ngaba County, north-eastern Tibet. The incident, according to the researcher, happened at 5pm yesterday, Monday 6th August, in Ngaba County.

The monk shouted for the return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama to Tibet before he set fire to himself on Pawu Sanglam- 'Martyr' or 'Hero' Street in Tibetan.

This is the 48th self-immolation since 2009 according to exile Tibetan administration based in Dharamshala, India, the protests all share a common theme: freedom in Tibet and the return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama from exile and he also shouted that Tibetan people should be all living together again in Tibet.

As is now normal procedure in self-immolations in Tibet and in Tibetan regions of China, Chinese state police arrived and put out the fire on the monk's body and they then took him to a local hospital in Ngaba County were he remained for half an hour, his whereabouts as of now is unknown.

Locals now called the street 'martyr's street' as there have been so many people willing to burn themselves for the Tibetan cause in the region.

Kalon Tripa, Dr Lobsang Sangay, commented on the latest self-immolation: "To understand these acts, it is crucial to know that within China, there is no room for freedom of speech and conventional forms of protest. A participant in a simple demonstration runs a high risk of arrest, torture and even death".

He also added that China's policies in Tibet are founded on "political oppression, social marginalization, cultural assimilation and environmental destruction" and that these policies are the root causes of such actions.

Addthis
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 08 August 2012 13:56 )  


......


Chinese espionage against exile Tibet community exposed

Chinese espionage against exile Tibet community exposed

Dharamshala: - A terror plot to poison t...

Arunachal CM and leaders pledge political support for Tibet

Arunachal CM and leaders pledge political support for Tibet

May 22, 2013, Itanagar: The Tibetan Parl...

Tibetans protest Chinese Premier Li Keqiang’s Indian visit

Tibetans protest Chinese Premier Li Keqiang’s Indian visit

New Delhi: - Tibetan activists staged a ...

'Revised White Paper' on Tibet Self-Immolations released

'Revised White Paper' on Tibet Self-Immolations released

Dharamshala: -The Central Tibetan Admini...

Exile admin. urges China to stop destructing Lhasa City of Tibet

Exile admin. urges China to stop destructing Lhasa City of Tibet

Dharamshala: - The Central Tibetan Admin...

Minister urges Tibetan intellectuals to join administration

Minister urges Tibetan intellectuals to join administration

Dharamshala: - Tibetan minister Pema Chh...

Political parties pledge support for Parliamentary resolution on Tibet

Political parties pledge support for Parliamentary resolution on Tibet

Guwahati, May 16, 2013: The 6-day lobby ...

Prayer service held in Shimla for the martyrs of Tibet

Prayer service held in Shimla for the martyrs of Tibet

Dharamshala: - local Tibetan community i...

Advertisements

In order to view this object you need Flash Player 9+ support!

Get Adobe Flash player
Joomla! Slideshow

Online Translation

English Afrikaans Albanian Arabic Armenian Azerbaijani Basque Belarusian Bulgarian Catalan Chinese (Simplified) Chinese (Traditional) Croatian Czech Danish Dutch Estonian Filipino Finnish French Galician Georgian German Greek Haitian Creole Hebrew Hindi Hungarian Icelandic Indonesian Irish Italian Japanese Korean Latvian Lithuanian Macedonian Malay Maltese Norwegian Persian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian Slovak Slovenian Spanish Swahili Swedish Thai Turkish Ukrainian Urdu Vietnamese Welsh Yiddish