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Home The News News Tibet continues to burn: Third self-immolation in three days

Tibet continues to burn: Third self-immolation in three days

DHARAMSHALA, March 5: In alarming news coming out of Tibet, another Tibetan died today after setting himself on fire protesting China’s occupation of Tibet.

This is the third self-immolation in as many days.

Dorjee, 18, a native of Cha Shang in the beleaguered Ngaba region of eastern Tibet set himself on fire at around 6.30 pm local time today.

The exile base of Kirti monastery in Dharamshala, in a release said that Dorjee carried out a march from a bridge to a Chinese office in the region.

“Dorjee was engulfed in fire as he raised slogans protesting the Chinese government’s policies in Tibet while marching towards the office building,” the release said.

Dorjee later died at the scene of his protest.

Cha Shang is located around 70 kms east to the main Ngaba town, the centre of the ongoing wave of self-immolations in Tibet.

“Local Tibetans tried to gain possession of Dorjee’s charred body but Chinese security personnel forcibly took it to Ngaba town,” the release added.

In the past two days, two women – Tsering Kyi, a 19-year school students and Rinchen, a 32-year old mother of four – torched their bodies protesting China’s continued occupation of Tibet.

Since 2009, now 26 Tibetans have set themselves on fire demanding the return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and freedom in Tibet.

The three self-immolations come days ahead of the 53rd anniversary of the March 10 Tibetan National Uprising Day and the one year commemoration of the March 16 self-immolation of Kirti monk Phuntsog.

Many parts of Tibet remain under an undeclared martial law following the fiery wave self-immolations and a series of mass protests that have been brutally suppressed.


Source: Phayul.com



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Newsflash

American Institute in Taiwan Director William Stanton said yesterday US policy toward China was shaped by idealism and that the US will not walk away from Taiwan.

“From a Machiavellian point of view, the easy thing would be to just not sell arms to Taiwan any more, simple, but we go on doing that,” Stanton said at a Taipei Salon lecture hosted by the Lung Yingtai Cultural Foundation.