PRESIDENTS OF FIVE TIBETAN NGOs TRANSFERRED TO JAIL IN HARDWAR

Saturday, May 31, 2008



Nainital - Five Presidents of the leading Tibetan non-governmental organizations in India, Tsewang Rigzin, B Tsering, Ngawang Woebar, Chime Youngdrung, and Tenzin Choeying, and one coordinator of the March to Tibet, Lobsang Yeshi, were transferred from Haldwani Police Station to Roshanabad Jail in Hardwar. They are being held under Indian Penal Code Section 151 and CRPC sections 106 and 107, according to which the Presidents, as organizers of the March to Tibet, are being accused of jeopardizing the lives of the 300 marchers.
“We are outraged that the peaceful leaders of a nonviolent march would be arrested and jailed,” said Choekyi, a Tibetan resident of Hardwar who broke into tears as she witnessed the six leaders being escorted through the jail gates. “They are not criminals; they are simply fighting China’s occupation of Tibet by using nonviolent means.”
The police have been meeting with the local village heads of Banspatan, encouraging them to create a list of complaints against the marchers. “They will use it as an excuse to remove us from here,” said Karma Sichoe, a member of the Organizing Committee. “The local Indians have been extremely welcoming and friendly, but the police are forcing them to help build a case against the Tibetan marchers.”
“Our fight is with the Chinese government, not the Indian government,” said Sherab Woeser, a main coordinator of the march. “We neither want to turn back nor do we want to stay here. We just want to walk peacefully to our ancestral homeland. Why would Tibetans need permission to return to our own home?”
Tibetans around the world have been alarmed by reports of continued repression in Tibet. Peaceful demonstrations for human rights and freedom have been consistently suppressed and monks and nuns have borne the brunt of the Chinese government’s crackdown in recent days.
According to the Tibetan Center for Human Rights and Democracy, in Kardze, Tibet (Ch: Sichuan Province), three nuns of Dragkar Nunnery and a female student were arrested by Kardze County Public Security Bureau (PSB) officials for staging a protest on May 28. After the first demonstration of the three nuns was broken up and the nuns taken away, 21-year-old female student Rigden Lhamo unfurled the Tibetan national flag and shouted slogans calling for freedom for Tibet, the release of political prisoners, and the return of the Dalai Lama to Tibet.
According to an eyewitness, security forces fired gunshots during the brief protest by the student Lhamo. It was unclear whether Rigden Lhamo was shot or injured but another eyewitness reported bloodstains on the body of Rigden Lhamo as she was taken away. Rigden Lhamo is from Lhakey Village, Thingkha Township, in Kardze County. Her current whereabouts are unknown.
The March to Tibet started on March 10th from Dharamshala, Himachal Pradesh, and reached Banspatan after traversing through many states over the course of 74 days. On the fourth day of the March, the first group of 100 marchers were arrested and put under judicial custody for 14 days. However, a second group of 48 Tibetan exiles resumed the March two days after the arrest and were joined by the first group soon after their release.
Tibetans living in exile in India launched the March to Tibet as part of the Tibetan People’s Uprising Movement. On the same day that the march was launched, monks from monasteries in Lhasa, as well as in eastern Tibet, led nonviolent demonstrations, shouting slogans supporting the Dalai Lama and independence for Tibet. Chinese authorities brutally suppressed peaceful protests that continued for days, leading to rioting in the capital and a wave of large public demonstrations that have rippled across the country.
The March to Tibet and the Tibetan People’s Uprising Movement aim to revive the spirit of the Tibetan National Uprising of 1959, and engage in nonviolent direct action to bring about an end to China’s illegal occupation of Tibet.

Marching to Tibet


by JASON MAGDER, The Gazette

In a few days, Michael Willcock's travel companions could either be shot, arrested or sent to a concentration camp near the India-Tibet border.
The Vanier College graduate is the only Canadian to have joined a group of Tibetan refugee monks on a march from the Indian town of Dharamsala - the seat of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama - back to Tibet. They set out on March 10, the 49th anniversary of Tibet's national uprising against China.
"They have all accepted the fact they could die or they could be tortured when they get back to Tibet," said Willcock, 22, who is holed up in a tent on the grounds of a monastery in the Indian city of Nainital after Indian officials barred him from the march.

Until last week, Willcock, who is filming the trek for a documentary he plans to produce, was one of six foreigners on the march. Indian police arrested the other five, who hail from the United States and Europe, on May 23 and ordered them to leave the country.
Indian authorities said the foreigners had violated the terms of their visitor's visas by taking part in a religious activity, according to the Times of India.
Willcock evaded police by crouching in the bushes. After fleeing, he was unable to rejoin the march because police were prohibiting any foreigners to pass without proper papers. He made his way to a nearby town and then travelled to a monastery in Nainital, about 100 kilometres away, to conduct interviews. He pitched a tent on the grounds of the monastery and plans to stay there until he can figure out a way to get back to the march without being stopped by local authorities.
"I'd really like to get back there and document everything that's going on because it's a very pivotal moment," he said by cellphone this week. "They're not letting anyone through without papers. It's going to be difficult, but I am going to try to get back as soon as I can."
The march is intended to bring world attention to the cause of the Tibetans. For the monks, however, it's also a way to get back to their homeland.
"They just want to see Tibet, or touch the ground, one more time before they die. They want to be back in their homeland when they die," Willcock said.
Many of the monks on the march are among the 100,000 Tibetans who were exiled from their home country in 1959 at the same time as the Dalai Lama. Some of the marchers were born in refugee camps in India.
"It is a non-violent resistance against an oppressive and violent force," Willcock said, alluding to China, whose military crackdown in 1959 prompted the uprising. "It's in the footsteps of Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr. and Nelson Mandela."
The marchers now are at a standoff with Indian police at the bottom of a ravine near Almora, a town about 200 kilometres from the Tibet border. It would take about a month for marchers to travel the mountainous terrain. It's unclear when the march will continue, but the monks are determined to press on.
"It would be very difficult for police to surround 300 people and take them up the ravine and off to jail - they don't have the resources for that," Willcock said.
ndian police have stymied the protesters on several occasions during the march.
Four days in, while trying to cross from one Indian state into another, marchers were stopped by police and many were arrested. While some marchers were held in jail for two days, Willcock was detained for just an hour.
"They thought I was an Indian national until I opened my mouth. Then they sent me out," Willcock said.
"It's too bad, because I wanted to stay to document what was going on inside the jail."
Willcock said he believes Indian police are following the group closely and are even monitoring their phone calls. To make sure his footage isn't seized by local authorities, he has been mailing his tapes to Belgium, and he plans to pick them up after he has finished shooting footage, sometime in September.
Despite resistance from local law enforcement, Willcock said there has not been any major violence toward the group.
The monks who have been his travelling companions for nearly two months have taught him a lot about compassion, he said.
"Some have scars all over their bodies or bullet holes, but they have completely forgiven the people who tortured them or killed their families and who are responsible for all their suffering," Willcock said.
"I want to bring back that message and show people that people are trying to solve their problems in a way that doesn't involve war or violence or killing other people, but purely from the heart, showing love and compassion. I think the best way to fight for freedom is peaceful resistance."
The monks have already forgiven their attackers for transgressions they will perpetrate against them in the future, he added. The monks believe they won't have an easy time crossing into Tibet and could be killed even before they set foot in their homeland.
Willcock said he hopes to capture that pivotal moment on film, though he'll try not to get too close, having vowed beforehand not to cross the frontier.
"I have never feared for my own life because I never considered actually crossing the border," he said.
Willcock's mother, Dawn Bramadat, said she's incredibly proud of her son's journey, but it's hard being so far away and knowing he may be in danger.
"He didn't get a visa to get into China and therefore into Tibet, and I was a bit relieved when that happened," she said from her home in Notre Dame de Grâce. "He will have to stop at the border, and that will be hard for him, knowing he will be separated from his friends and fellow marchers."







Protest march by Tibetan exiles stopped in northern India

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

LUCKNOW, India — Authorities in northern India have again stopped a protest march by more than 300 Tibetan exiles heading for their homeland.
The demonstrators, including Buddhist monks and nuns carrying pictures of the Dalai Lama and "Free Tibet" banners, want their arrival to coincide with this summer's Beijing Olympics Games.
The marchers began their journey March 10 in the Indian city of Dharmsala, headquarters of the Tibetan government-in-exile.
Indian police detained a group of the marchers for two weeks, but the protesters restarted their walk March 15 and were allowed to proceed.
Now they have been stopped again and authorities in Uttarakhand state say they are trying to convince them to return to Dharmsala.
Authorities in India fear the protest march would embarrass China, with whom New Delhi is trying to improve economic ties despite a lingering border dispute.
Tenzin Choedon, a spokeswoman for Students for a Free Tibet, one of the groups organizing the march, said the protesters are determined to continue their walk to Tibet.
"They are determined to carry on with this non-violent direct action," Choedon told The Associated Press in a telephone interview from Nainital, one of the main towns of Uttarakhand.
India has generally allowed the Tibetan exiles to protest peacefully, but as anti-China protests gathered momentum before the Beijing Olympics, the government has said that it would not tolerate actions that embarrassed China.
India is home to the world's largest Tibetan exile community, with more than 100,000 exiles.

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