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Tibetans hold massive
rally to shame Olympics host China
Reuters, August 08, 2007
By Jonathan
Alle
Tibetans
living in exile hold the Tibetan national flag during a protest in
New Delhi August 8, 2007. Thousands of Tibetans marched through New
Delhi on Wednesday, shouting slogans and waving flags in protest
against China's actions in Tibet at the start of the one-year
countdown to the Beijing Olympics. REUTERS/Desmond Boylan
NEW
DELHI, Aug 8: Thousands of Tibetans marched through New Delhi on
Wednesday, shouting slogans and waving flags in protest against
China's actions in Tibet at the start of the one-year countdown to
the Beijing Olympics.
In one of the biggest rallies by Tibetans in India, about 10,000
Tibetans, including maroon-robed Buddhist monks and women in
traditional costumes, bellowed their demands, asking China to prove
it was upholding the rights of people living in Tibet.
"The essence of the Olympics is equality, but we do
not have equality in Tibet," said Kalsang Godrukpa, president of the
Tibetan Youth Congress, the main organ iser
of the rally.
"China doesn't deserve the Olympics
until Tibet is free," he told reporters, as protesters marched by
wearing yellow baseball caps and waving Tibetan flags and giant
posters of
the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader.
Chinese
troops marched into Tibet in 1950 and Beijing has since ruled the
Himalayan region. About 120,000 Tibetans are exiled in India,
including the Dalai Lama who fled after a failed uprising in 1959.
Amnesty
International and other rights groups say China is severely
restricting the freedom of Tibetan people and suppressing their
culture. China says it is helping a historically poor region
develop.
EMBARRASS
LEADERS
China
is trying to look its best as it comes under increasing
international scrutiny in the run-up to the Beijing Olympics, and
protesters hope they can get enough attention to embarrass its
leaders into meeting their demands.
"The world will hear us and support us, and if the world supports us
then China will have to listen to us," said Tsetan Ngodup, a
43-year-old protester.
Scores of policemen with canes watched the mile-long parade of
protesters as they marched towards parliament, before being stopped
from entering the high-security zone.
Wednesday's protest came as a hunger strike by 14 Tibetans entered
its 32nd day. They are asking Beijing to provide evidence that the
Panchen Lama -- who they believe to be their second highest
spiritual leader -- is alive, among other demands.
The
14 lay listless on cots under a tarpaulin shelter close to the site
of the protest. Some ran prayer beads through their
hands as a
nurse tended to a woman with a wet sponge.
Tashi Wangu, a 54-year-old farmer, said the 14 would fast until
China reassured them that it would uphold the civil rights of
Tibetan people.
He said he was not disheartened when the Dalai Lama urged the
strikers on Tuesday to end their fast saying their strike was brave
but that sacrificing more Tibetan lives was unlikely to make China
relent.
"We will keep on fasting," Wangu said through a translator. "The
pain is nothing, and our demands are so simple -- we just want a
response from China guaranteeing Tibetans' human rights." |