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  • 10
    May
    2012
    4:20pm, EDT

    Dalai Lama to give $1.7 million prize to a mystery beneficiary

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    The Dalai Lama, the Tibetan Buddhist spiritual leader, is to be awarded a $1.7 million prize – then instantly give it away.

    Tenzin Gyatso, 76, the 14th Dalai Lama, will be presented with the Templeton Prize – the world's largest - at a ceremony at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London on Monday.

    The Tibetan monk, believed by his followers to be the reincarnation of an ancient Buddhist leader, has not yet identified the recipient of the prize money.

    China boosts security in Tibet following protests

    Visiting St Paul’s for the first time, will receive the prize from Dr John M. Templeton, Jr, president and chairman of the John Templeton Foundation and son of the late prize founder.

    Q&A: The Dalai Lama, Tibet and China

    Guests at the ceremony, to be broadcast live on the internet on the organization’s website, will include the British actress Joanna Lumley.

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    14 comments

    If the WORLD really wants to do something for the Dalai Lama... The WORLD can take the INVASION of Tibet to the World Court... But we all know, that China NOW owns the Elite Rulers of the so-called Modern WORLD and NOTHING will happen...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us, human-rights, china, religion, faith, giving, dalai-lama, tibet
  • 29
    Mar
    2012
    2:39pm, EDT

    Dalai Lama wins $1.7 million prize

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    The Dalai Lama, the Tibetan Buddhist spiritual leader, has won $1.7 million after being awarded the 2012 Templeton Prize for his work linking science and wider questions of faith and religion.

    Tenzin Gyatso, 76, the 14th Dalai Lama, will be presented with his award at a ceremony at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London in May.


    The Tibetan monk, believed by his followers to be the reincarnation of an ancient Buddhist leader, has not yet said how intends to spend the cash.

    The prize comes at a time of heightened tension between Tibetans and Chinese authorities.

    China boosts security in Tibet following protests

    In a video response on the John Templeton Foundation website, he described the award as recognition of his “little service to humanity."

    John Templeton Jr., son of the late prize founder, said the Dalai Lama “offers a universal voice of compassion underpinned by a love and respect for spiritually relevant scientific research that centers on every single human being."

    Q&A: The Dalai Lama, Tibet and China

    The foundation said the prize is the world's largest annual monetary award given to an individual.

    The Dalai Lama, who has both a Facebook and a Twitter account, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989.

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    21 comments

    dalai would better stays as a religious monk than playing politician and stirring trouble in Tibet.

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    Explore related topics: china, prize, dalai-lama, tibet, featured
  • 27
    Mar
    2012
    5:12pm, EDT

    Turmoil builds in China's Tibetan regions

    Updated at 2:15 a.m.: Tibetan protesters are demanding an end to what they say is relentless repression by Beijing.

    NBC News' Adrienne Mong has more on the latest -- including rare footage of monks demonstrating in Qinghai Province.

    Related content: PhotoBlog: Tibetan protester sets himself on fire

    NYT: 'Red terror' crackdown deepens China scandal

    Not Chinese enough in China? Chinese-Americans caught between 2 worlds

    China struggles to contain wave of defiance in Tibet

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    70 comments

    When the Muslims were converting/killing Buddhist during the 800 to 1100;s CE. Genghis Khan was created... Genghis Khan rallied the many independent tribes and then drove the Muslims out of; Asia, the EU, and Northern Africa.

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    Explore related topics: china, tibet, featured, self-immolation, adrienne-mong
  • 26
    Mar
    2012
    7:35am, EDT

    Tibetan man sets himself on fire in protest

    Manish Swarup / AP

    A Tibetan man screams as he runs engulfed in flames after self-immolating at a protest in New Delhi, India, ahead of Chinese President Hu Jintao's visit to the country Monday, March 26, 2012. The Tibetan activist lit himself on fire at the gathering and was rushed to hospital with unknown injuries, reports said.

    Reuters reports:A Tibetan man set himself on fire in New Delhi on Monday at a protest against a visit by Chinese president Hu Jintao, who is due to arrive in India later this week for a summit meeting.  

    Thirty Tibetans have set themselves on fire, mostly in southwestern China, in the past year to protest against Chinese rule in Tibet, according to Tibetan rights groups. At least 20 of them have died.

    Update 7:37am ET, Wednesday: The man, Jamphel Yeshi, 27 has dies from his injuries according to the general secretary of the Tibetan Youth Congress.

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    Tibetan exiles try to douse the flames from their comrade, Jamphel Yeshi, after he set himself on fire during a protest against the upcoming visit of Chinese President Hu Jintao to India in New Delhi March 26, 2012. Hu is scheduled to attend the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) Summit in India on March 29.

    Adnan Abidi / Reuters

    Jamphel Yeshi, a Tibetan exile, is taken to hospital after he sets himself on fire during a protest against the upcoming visit of Chinese President Hu Jintao to India in New Delhi March 26, 2012. Hu is scheduled to attend the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) Summit in India on March 29.

     

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    20 comments

    Dan, Spencer, Romilio, Bebop, etc... it's idiots like you that explain why the rest of the world hates Americans. Clarence... read the above... Yeshi is a very noble person, who gave his life so that the world (not the idiots, of course) would take notice. A donkey poop pie would only get the throwe …

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    Explore related topics: china, world-news, tibet, self-immolation
  • 23
    Mar
    2012
    4:47pm, EDT

    China struggles to contain wave of defiance in Tibet

    Since January, demonstrations have erupted across the Tibetan areas of China. For more than a year now, Tibetans have been setting themselves on fire as a form of protest against Chinese rule, the latest being a father of three. A warning, this report from our International editor Lindsey Hilsum does contain very distressing images.

     

    By msnbc.com news services

    It's illegal for Tibetans to protest, and yet demonstrations against Chinese rule have taken place almost daily for the past two months.

    Several monks have set themselves alight, illustrating the desperation of Tibetans resisting Chinese rule.

    The spate of self-immolations in the Tibetan-dominated areas of China that have occurred over the past year is "extreme" and hurts social harmony, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said recently.


    Wen's comments, at a news conference at the end of the annual meeting of parliament, come after around 26 Tibetans have set themselves on fire, mostly in southwestern China, to protest against Chinese rule in Tibet. At least 19 have died, according to Tibetan rights groups.

    Activists say China violently stamps out religious freedom and culture in Tibet, which has been under Chinese control since 1950.

    China rejects criticism that it is eroding Tibetan culture and faith, saying its rule has ended serfdom and brought development to a backward region.

    The brother of a monk who self-immolated spoke from exile, saying he was "shocked" when he heard the news, but understands the monk's sacrifice. "I feel really, really proud of him and I respect his sacrifice a lot," he said.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    115 comments

    China out of Tibet! End Chinese imperialism and oppression! Boycott Chinese goods and businesses until Tibetans receive their freedom and independence and all Christians in China are allowed to worship openly and freely.

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    Explore related topics: china, tibet, featured, self-immolation
  • 17
    Mar
    2012
    11:39pm, EDT

    Reports: Thousands of Tibetans attend funeral of farmer who set himself afire in protest

    By Reuters

    A Tibetan farmer burned himself to death in southwestern China on Saturday, the latest in a wave of self-immolations protesting against Beijing's control over Tibetan areas of the country, a rights group said.

    Several thousand Tibetans attended Sonam Thargyal's funeral on the same day, many of them protesting against Chinese rule, UK-based Free Tibet said.


    He was the third person reported to have set himself alight in four days and the 30th in the past year. At least twenty of those protesters have died of their injuries, say rights groups.

    China's government has described people who set themselves alight as "terrorists."

    Activists say China violently stamps out religious freedom and culture in Tibet, the mountainous region of western China which has been under Chinese control since 1950.

    China rejects criticism that it is eroding Tibetan culture and faith, saying its rule has ended serfdom and brought development to a backward region.

    Sonam, a father of three in his 40s, set himself alight on Saturday morning near the town centre of Rongwo, in Tongren county, Qinghai province, UK-based Free Tibet said. He died on the scene, Free Tibet and Radio Free Asia said.

    Sonam was a close friend of Jamyang Palden, a monk in his 30s who set himself on fire near the Rongwo Monastery on Wednesday and is believed to be alive but critically ill, Free Tibet said.

    Following his death Saturday morning, several thousand Tibetans gathered in Rongwo for his cremation, and a number then marched into the town centre calling for freedom, the group said.

    "This is the biggest gathering of people I have ever seen in this place. People are pouring in from the villages," it quoted one unnamed eyewitness as saying.

     

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    81 comments

    FREE TIBET!!

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    Explore related topics: fire, tibet, self-immolation, tibetan-protest
  • 29
    Feb
    2012
    5:55pm, EST

    Report: Tibetan dies while bombing building in western China

    By Kari Huus, msnbc.com

    A Tibetan man died when detonating a bomb in a government building in western China over the weekend, Radio Free Asia reported.


    Kari Huus


    Follow Kari Huus on Twitter and Facebook.



    The man identified as Tashi, 32, part of the large Tibetan minority population concentrated in the western province of Sichuan, targeted a building used to monitor local residents, the report on Monday said, citing India-based Tibetans with contacts in the area.


    "He died in the explosion that also damaged the building. The extent of damage on the government building is not clear," an India-based friend of Tashi told RFA.

    The report did not say whether there were other people or casualties in the building at the time, nor report the extent of the damage to the building.

    The state-controlled media in China normally does not report on ethnic unrest, so reports like this one typically get out by word of mouth. Radio Free Asia is a U.S. government broadcaster that beams news into undemocratic countries in the region.

    Such acts of violence are rare in Tibet and Tibetan-populated areas, though the conflict with the Han Chinese authorities has been more severe since 2008, when a series of protests and demonstrations spread from the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, to other Tibetan areas and descended into rioting. The violence was largely aimed at Han civilians and was harshly suppressed by China’s paramilitary. The clashes left at least 10 dead officially and dozens more wounded — though some Tibet watchers say that the casualties were many times higher and that thousands of Tibetans have been arrested.

    A more common form of protest among Tibetans has been self-immolation. According to records kept by The International Campaign for Tibet, a group advocating for human rights and democracy in Tibet, 10 Tibetans have set themselves on fire in the months of January and February alone.

    China severely represses actions or expressions of support for Tibetan independence. The Dalai Lama, spiritual leader of Tibetans, fled in the early days of China’s Communist rule, where he has lived in exile ever since.

    Ethnic tensions have increased in the past decade with Beijing’s "Open up the West" economic development campaign which has systematically increased the population Han Chinese living in traditionally Tibetan and other minority areas.

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    Follow Kari Huus on Facebook

    5 comments

    The only reason the Chinese (PROC) are concerned with Tibet is it the source of the most important river providing water to the plains of China's interior. Their fears of being held hostage to manipulation of that water resource will and has allow them to justify any amount of force to maintain thei …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: china, dalai-lama, tibet, featured, tibetans, kari-huus
  • 3
    Feb
    2012
    5:40am, EST

    China tightens its grip on Tibetans

    Philippe Lopez / AFP - Getty Images, file

    Paramilitary police walk the streets of Aba in China's Sichuan province in October.

    By Adrienne Mong

    BEIJING — Just short of four years ago, NBC News tried to cover an outbreak of violence in a Tibetan community in remote western Sichuan Province. 

    The drive from the capital Chengdu took thirteen hours, but my colleague and I were turned away just a few dozen miles away from our destination, Aba.  We had run into a lone Chinese police roadblock set up around a bend in the road, blocked from our view by a hill.  A four-hour standoff with local authorities ensued as the police unsuccessfully tried to view—and seize--our videotapes.

    Even back then, the challenge of trying to report from a harsh region that was being sealed off by the Chinese government was formidable, and we found ourselves relying on secondhand reports.  Twitter was still in its infancy; its Chinese equivalent Sina Weibo did not even exist. 


    But BlackBerries did.  Impressively there was reception on the Tibetan Plateau in Sichuan, enabling us to read a stream of emailed reports from exiled Tibetan groups alleging Han Chinese atrocities being committed against Tibetans inside Aba.  But without being able to enter the area or being able to talk to residents, we could not verify any of the stories.

    Fast forward four years later, not much appears to have changed.  Once again, foreign journalists are unable to report in the area, and secondhand reports are the norm.

    However, the crackdown taking place across China’s Tibetan communities is not so much just another stage of a cycle that’s repeating itself as it is perhaps growing evidence that March 2008 was a turning point.

    A watershed moment
    “The region has never recovered from the 2008 repression,” said Nicholas Bequelin, a senior researcher with Human Rights Watch who monitors the region. 

    “That really was a turning point.  We’re still in the aftermath of this very, very severe repression that took place in 2008….  Over the years, [Chinese officials] have shifted from trying to gain the consent of the Tibetan people to basically riding roughshod.”

    Following a year of Tibetans--mostly monks and nuns--setting themselves on fire, the western half of Sichuan, once part of the Himalayan kingdom, finds itself ringed with checkpoints. 

    Kyodo News via AP

    Armed police patrol a Tibetan area in Chengdu, Sichuan province, on Tuesday.

    “The Chinese authorities have set up a massive security cordon in an attempt to prevent journalists from entering Tibetan areas in Western Sichuan Province where major unrest – including killings and self-immolations – has been reported,” said the Foreign Correspondents Club of China (FCCC) in an emailed statement on Thursday.

    The cordon, continued the FCCC statement, is “a clear violation of China’s regulations governing foreign reporters, which allow them to travel freely and to interview anyone prepared to be interviewed.”

    Foreign camera crews have been harassed and their Chinese colleagues intimidated and threatened.  Attempts to enter the region by car, taxi, or even on foot have been blocked; local authorities have used excuses such as “bad weather” or “dangerous conditions” to keep outsiders from proceeding.

    Security is also tight in neighboring Qinghai Province, also once part of the Tibetan kingdom.  Meanwhile, security forces the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) are on high alert, with troops fanning out across the capital Lhasa.  There appears to be as much concern about preventing information about what’s happening inside the Tibetan areas from leaking out as there is about containing any opposition to Beijing.

    “We have had pretty consistent reports of the gearing up of security measures that are taken there,” said Bequelin.  “Lhasa is basically a garrison town now.”

    A murky future

    Reports of the crackdown have been cast against the backdrop of several upcoming events: the Tibetan New Year, the anniversary of the March 10, 2008, protests, and the Chinese Communist Party Congress.  The party congress, which takes place every five years, is an especially sensitive event this time as it will usher in a massive leadership changeover.

    But Beijing has also painted itself into a corner.

    “The government has no room for compromise, because they insist on this depiction of the reality that is absurd,” said Bequelin.  A reality, he continued, that claims that Tibet is a harmonious place populated by happy Tibetan people grateful for the economic growth Beijing has brought them.

    Indeed, state-run media contend the unrest in Tibetan regions is due to a handful of bad foreign elements. 

    The Global Times ran an article today that quoted a local Tibetan policeman describing a recent outbreak of violence in Sichuan Province “as a result of a few separatists in and outside of China plotting riots and instigating the mostly non-political Tibetan residents to follow them.”

    Like the security forces in the Tibetan areas, this narrative has remained constant, and according to many observers it risks preventing Beijing from understanding the real challenges they face.    

    16 comments

    I feel bad for Tibetan activists but, frankly, I don't see how they could conceivably ever win this fight or that this could end any other way but badly for them.

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  • 14
    Dec
    2011
    6:35am, EST

    Rebellious Chinese village under siege by police

    AFP - Getty Images

    An undated cellphone picture shows thousands of residents of Wukan village in China's Guangdong province carrying a banner saying "Wukan's people were treated unjustly" during a protest of alleged illegal land seizures.

    By Ed Flanagan, NBC News

    BEIJING– For years, in the name of social harmony, China’s ruling Communist Party has been highly successful in masking, placating or simply distorting the tens of thousands of protests – dubbed “mass demonstrations” – that occur here ever year.

    The Wukan rebellion will prove a tougher dilemma for Beijing to solve.

    From The Telegraph newspaper’s Malcolm Moore comes details of the stunning story of Wukan, a fishing village of 20,000 in China’s southern Guangdong Province.  Earlier this week, the entire town rose up and threw out local party officials and police forces following years of having the people’s land sold out from underneath them.

    The villagers’ frustration mixed with anger over news that one of the protest organizers, Xue Jinbo, died in police custody, allegedly from a heart attack.  Since the start of the revolt in September, Wukan residents have successfully thwarted multiple attempts by the police to re-enter the town by creating roadblocks out of fallen trees or just using themselves.

    They are now in a tense standoff with security forces, which earlier formed a cordon around Wukan--although a villager inside the perimeter told NBC News earlier today by phone that the cordon has been removed, leaving one checkpoint blocking the central access into the town.


    Scores of state security officers are said to be still positioned around the edge of Wukan, which has begun seven days of mourning for the fallen protest leader.

    Moore also reports that the town has enough food to last ten more days and that the security cordon is in fact still in effect (Click here to read more on how Malcolm Moore slipped through the security cordon).

     

    That we know anything about this explosive story – which has been months in the making but appears to be coming to a head this week – is largely due to Moore, who earlier successfully slipped through the security cordon and since has been filing articles and Tweets on events occurring within Wukan.  (Follow him on twitter: @MalcolmMoore)

    The reports have given everyone a rare inside look at the mindset and mechanics of a popular uprising in China--a rarity for foreign journalists who often face tight, sometimes arbitrary restrictions, and harassment by local government forces when trying to report on issues deemed sensitive.

    The Chinese village of Wukan in China's southern Guangdong Province had enough of local government corruption and threw out local party officials earlier this year. Now they are in a tense standoff with security forces who have formed a cordon around the town, cutting it off from the outside world. See video of the protests.

    Slipping through China’s security
    To say that foreign journalists in China know a thing or two about security cordons is an understatement.

    Over the years, the security apparatus has become exceptionally good at quickly sealing off and containing problem areas while at the same time wallpapering over dissent with state media coverage.

    In 2008, during the spring Tibetan uprisings, NBC attempted multiple times to enter the Tibetan areas of Sichuan Province for coverage but was turned back by security forces that had formed roadblocks around the region to prevent independent reporters and observers from entering.

    Similar restrictions have continued this year.  Journalists have attempted to enter those areas again following a wave of self-immolations by Tibetans that has called renewed attention to the plight of China’s Tibetan minority.

    Most recently, local government officials in the Shandong town of Linyi have effectively bottled up local dissent by keeping blind lawyer and social activist, Chen Guangcheng, under perpetual house arrest.

    Supporters of Chen – who in 2006 famously filed a lawsuit on behalf of his fellow residents against the local government over its practice of forced abortions and sterilizations – and foreign journalists have attempted many times this year to visit the activist and his family.  But they’ve been met at the town’s edge by plain-clothed security agents who forcibly restrict visitors from entering by throwing rocks and swinging sticks.

    It was only in the last week – under intense public pressure – that the provincial government of Shandong intervened, permitting ulcer medicine to be brought to Chen.

    Peter Parks / AFP - Getty Images

    Armed police in riot gear stand at a roadblock en route to Wukan on Wednesday. Residents of the village, which was surrounded by police after protests over the death in custody of a community, leader vowed to continue their fight for land rights.

    Will other Chinese dominos fall?
    The dramatic chain of events in Wukan begs the obvious question, could this be the proverbial “first domino” that falls in a wave of similar copycat protests nationwide?  As Moore stresses in his coverage of the rebellion, the people of Wukan are counting on the central government to come to the rescue and depose the corrupt local officials whom they believe responsible for their current plight.

    That hope has manifested itself in the numerous rumors, as Moore reports, swirling around the village.  The most recent is that China’s state news channel, CCTV, is coming later this week to cover the standoff.  Some of the villagers have concluded amongst themselves that national coverage of their plight will lead to swift action by China’s ruling party against the corrupt Wukan government.

    How the central government manages Wukan’s revolt against party authority is a source of intense speculation.  Its action will generate strong responses both nationally and abroad and will reveal to China watchers which audience the party wishes to anger less.

    On one hand, Beijing could do as Wukan’s villagers wish and come down hard on the local officials, reaffirming the Communist Party’s often-repeated mantra of “serving the people.”  This path, however, could have the unintended consequence of convincing local governments throughout the mainland that Beijing is willing to sell out its own in order to preserve social harmony, potentially forming a rift between local and central government apparatuses.

    On the other hand, Beijing could determine that preservation of Party rule is the single most important priority and elect to crush the rebellion through force or the threat of it.  Such a tack would instantly draw international condemnation, but as China has shown in the past international opinion plays a very distant second to its interest in preserving national stability.

    A dark horse in changing that thinking is the ever-evolving Chinese blogosphere, which increasingly has filled the role as national zeitgeist.  Ironically, even as state censors work overtime to scrub the web of news and discussion of socially delicate issues like Wukan, decision-makers here increasingly must account for public reaction on these matters and factor potential online anger in the complex calculus that is governing.

    Where China will fall on this matter remains to be seen, but the next few days will tell us a lot about how Beijing plans to handle mass disturbances in the near future.

    NBC News producer Bo Gu contributed to this report.

    139 comments

    If the Chinese people use their sheer numbers against the authorities, the leaders would not stand a chance. Why they are holding back on this village is a stumper. Maybe the answer is that if they go in with guns blazing,other villages will get upset and start following suit. Families whom have liv …

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    Explore related topics: china, protest, tibet, featured, chen-guangcheng, ed-flanagan, wukan
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