DHARAMSHALA, November 6: Five monks from the Drango  Monastery in the Kardze region of eastern Tibet have been sentenced to  varying prison terms of six to seven years for their alleged involvement  in a major anti-China protest that erupted in the area earlier this  year.
Dharamshala based rights group Tibetan Centre for Human  Rights and Democracy in a release today said their sentencing came after  months of arbitrary detention and disappearance.
The five monks  have been identified as, Tulku Lobsang Tenzin, 40, a reincarnated lama  and abbot of Gochen Monastery - sentenced to seven years in prison,  Drango Monastery’s teacher Geshe Tsewang Namgyal, 42, and accountant  Tashi Thupwang aka Dralha, 31 - sentenced to six years, the monastery’s  shop manager Thinlay - sentenced to five years, and Geshe Tenzin Palsang  aka Tenga, senior caretaker of the monastery - sentenced to six years.
“Geshe  Lobsang Tenzin, along with Geshe Tsewang Namgyal, Dralha and Thinlay  were detained from an Internet café in Tridu (Ch: Chengdu) in late  January. Since then, they had remained disappeared for about ten months  until their recent sentencing,” TCHRD said.
“Geshe Tenzin Palsang was detained on 2 April in Drango and since then had remained disappeared until his sentencing.”
The  group cited sources as saying that the family members and relatives of  the monks were informed about the sentencing after about 15 days. No  details are available on the exact charges under which the sentences  were passed.
The release added that three known Tibetans, Yonten  Sangpo, Tashi Dhargye and Namgyal Dhondup continue to remain missing  after their detention following the Drango protest.
Hundreds of  Tibetans had come out on the streets in Drango on January 23, the first  day of Chinese new year, calling for Tibet’s freedom and the return of  His Holiness the Dalai Lama from exile. Chinese security forces  retaliated by firing indiscriminately at the unarmed demonstrators,  killing and injuring scores of people.
Following the protests,  Chinese authorities led a large-scale manhunt for suspected  demonstrators and in one instance, shot down and killed two brothers in  their hideout in the nearby hills of Drango.
Over the past months, China has been tightening the noose on Tibetans suspected of taking part in the peaceful protests.
Chinese  courts in eastern Tibet have sentenced scores of Tibetan to varying  prison terms – from nine months to life-imprisonment, including both  monks and laymen, for their ‘involvement’ in the January 23 protest.
Source: Phayul.com



 









