Source http://www.rfa.org/english/news/woeser-09302008132134.html/woeser-2002

2008-09-30

By Dan Southerland, RFA Executive Editor-Tibet’s best-known female writer has evolved from a member of China’s privileged elite into a forceful critic. Despite the loss of her job, the closure of her blogs, and constant surveillance, Woeser reveals through her poems the courage to speak out.

WoeserWASHINGTON-”Most of all I wish you courage,” the American poet Pam Brown wrote to her daughter decades ago. “That usually takes care of everything else.”

Courage is a defining trait in the life and work of the contemporary Tibetan poet Woeser.

A banned author inside China, Woeser-the name means Rays of Light in Tibetan-continues to write from her small apartment in Beijing not only poems, but also essays and reports on the current situation in Tibet.

She is under constant Chinese police surveillance. (more…)

Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7649761.stm

China has been monitoring and censoring messages sent through the internet service Skype, researchers say.

Citizen Lab, a Canadian research group, says it found a database containing thousands of politically sensitive words which had been blocked by China.

The publically available database also displayed personal data on subscribers.

Skype said it had always been open about the filtering of data by Chinese partners, but that it was concerned by breaches in the security of the site.

Citizen Lab researchers, based at the University of Toronto, said they discovered a huge surveillance system which had picked up and stored messages sent through the online telephone and text messaging service.

The database held more than 150,000 messages which included words such as “democracy” and “Tibet” and phrases relating to the banned spiritual movement, Falun Gong. (more…)

By CHRISTOPHER BODEEN
BEIJING (AP) - Jigme, a Tibetan Buddhist monk, says he had just finished having a pair of shoes mended when four uniformed guards jumped from a white van and dragged him inside.

Suppressing his calls to a passing nun for help, they shoved a sack over his head and drove him to a guesthouse run by the local paramilitary People’s Armed Police.

What followed, according to Jigme, was two months of interrogation and abuse over his suspected role in this spring’s uprising against Chinese rule across Tibet and a broad swath of Tibetan-inhabited regions in western China. (more…)

Kumbum, Tibet (AP photo)KUMBUM MONASTERY, China (AFP) - As monks in red and orange robes stroll past tourists snapping photos of the temples, the quiet of the Kumbum Monastery seems a world away from the Olympics in far-off Beijing.But for many of the monks in this monastery on the edge of the Tibetan plateau in the Chinese province of Qinghai the Games have had a very real impact on their daily lives. (more…)

by Nirmala Carvalho

 

Thousands meet for a series of initiatives. Many are still concerned that nothing may change. Indian police detain 56 Tibetans who wanted to cross the border. Dalai Lama sends his prayers and wishes for the success of the Olympics, a great event for China.

Dharamsala (AsiaNews) - Thousands of Tibetans are gathering in Dharamsala to protest against repression in Tibet, whilst the Dalai sends his good wishes for the success of the Olympics. (more…)

Phayul.com

By Phurbu Thinley

Dharamsala, August 7: With Olympic games’ opening ceremony to kick off less than few hours in Beijing, hundreds of restless Tibetans today rallied in Dharamsala, the Tibetan administrative capital in exile, to condemn against, what they call, China’s brutal and illegal occupation of their Himalayan homeland.

Shouting Tibetan freedom and anti-China slogans, Tibetans, including monks and nuns, and Tibet supporters took part in the rally from McLeod Ganj, often called Upper Dharamsala, to lower Dharamsala.

The demonstrators carried protest banners and Tibetan National flags, and wore black dress and put black bands around their heads, to show their protest against 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Similar demonstrations will also take place in Dharamsala tomorrow. According to the organising leaders, there will be more sporadic protests campaigns in Dharamsala and other parts of the world during and even after the Beijing Olympics.

There will be a candle light vigil later in the evening, followed by screening of a new video footage of the March unrests in Tibet.

Dharamsala will also take part in “Candle for Tibet”, described by the organisers as the “biggest single action in the world for Free Tibet” by lighting a candle on the eve of the Beijing Olympics to show their solidarity with Tibetans in Tibet tonight.

The demonstrators were also seen condemning International Olympic Committee (IOC) for giving rights to Beijing to host the games.

“IOC has defeated the very spirit and principles of Olympics by giving China the right to host the Games” Ven. Ngawang Woeber, president of the Gu-Chu-Sum Movement of Tibet, told Phayul.

“China with its largest population in the world certainly deserves this right like any other country, but right now it is governed by a communist regime which rules the country through intimidation and violent repression” he said.

“China deprives the rights and freedoms of its own people and does not uphold the ideals of the Olympics in order to host it at this time, not at least after what is happening in Tibet,” he said.

“Since March this year, many Tibetans have perished -many dead, many missing and still many others going through regular extreme and brutal torture in Chinese prisons,” he said, adding “We are in grave concern of what is happening to Tibetans inside Tibet”. “I know how it is being in Chinese prisons, regular interrogation with torture with medical treatment and food,” Ven. Woebar, who suffered torture for four months in Chinese prison after taking part in 1987 demonstration in Lhasa, said.

Woebar fears worst is yet to happen in Tibet after the Olympic Games. Secret official documents of the Chinese Government leaked out last month revealed that the communist authorities are planning to implement a “cultural revolution” like-campaign in Tibet once the games would be over.

Describing the situation is Tibet as being in “deep crisis”; Ven. Woebar said Chinese authorities have now virtually turned Tibet into a prison camp with

“It is ironic that world leaders and athletes are now ready to celebrate Olympics in a place where the Communist regime has massacred thousands of Chinese students,” Ven. Woebar said referring to the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre.

The Tibetan demonstrators also called on international community to stand up for Tibet in their fight for justice and freedom.

“For the past five decades, China has brought immense sufferings on Tibetans, refusing us basic human rights and freedom,” Chemi Youngdrung, president of Tibetan National Democratic Party of Tibet, said.

Saying Tibetans have fully committed themselves to nonviolent and peaceful means in their struggle for freedom; Mr Youngdrung said, “It is the moral obligation of the peace-loving people of the world to take a stand for truth and justice and for Tibet”.

The exiled Tibetan leader His Holiness the Dalai Lama yesterday reiterated he supported China’s right to host Olympics, saying it would be a “moment of great pride to the 1.3 billion Chinese people”. He went on to offer “prayers and good wishes” for the success of the games.

The Economic Time

DHARAMSALA: Exiled Tibetans marched in Dharamsala on Wednesday to protest the killing of fellow countrymen in Lhasa earlier this year. With candles in their hands and prayers on their lips, Buddhist monks and nuns attired in their traditional maroon robes led the procession which kept getting bigger as locals and foreigners joined.

Tsering Norbu, an exiled Tibetan, said his protest was against the suppression of human rights in Tibet. Over 25,000 Tibetans are expected to gather in New Delhi on August 8 to participate in a mass demonstration calling for a boycott of the Beijing Olympics. (more…)

 Express India (Indian Express - Web News)

Dharamsala, August 7: Not withstanding Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama’s good wishes for Beijing Olympics, Tibetans in Dharamsala have decided to switch off lights of their houses for two hours during the opening ceremony of the mega sporting event tomorrow protesting China’s Tibet policy.

Tibetans residing here would also switch their lights off for one hour every day from 8 pm to 9 pm during the entire duration of the Olympics games from August 8 to August 24, Tenzin Choeying, national director of “Students for a Free Tibet”, said in a statement. (more…)

ANI
June 8, 2008

Ponta Sahib, (Himacahal Pradesh): Arrested Tibetans-in-exile in Ponta Sahib said that they were determined to reach their homeland and complete their march to Tibet.

“We will follow the rules of the government after detention by the police. But, we will reach Tibet and fight for our independence,” Vice President of Tibetan Democratic Party Ashang Happa said on Saturday. (more…)

International Herald Tribune

NEW DELHI (AP) - Indian police have arrested 265 Tibetan exiles marching to their homeland to protest Chinese rule and will send them back to the northern Indian town where they began their protest nearly three months ago, an official said Thursday.

Police arrested the protesters on Wednesday about 180 kilometers (115 miles) from India’s border with China leading to Tibet, local administrator Sainthil Pandiyan said. (more…)