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China-Japan-Koreas
80 dead in Tibet riot; fears of more chaos
2008-03-17
BEIJING - The Tibetan government in exile said it had confirmed at least 80 deaths in rioting in Lhasa, as Tibetan independence protests continued in monastery towns in western China on Sunday, and the Dalai Lama said he had “grave concerns” that more bloodshed could follow.

The German newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau reported that staff from international non-governmental organisations were ordered to leave Lhasa by Monday, raising fears that troops could toughen their crackdown on the protesters once a deadline for protesters to surrender passes at midnight on Monday. “As the Tibet uprising continues reliable sources have confirmed that at least 80 people were killed on March 14, 2008 in Lhasa,” the government in exile, based in the Indian city of Dharamsala, said in a statement.

The Dalai Lama, the highest leader of Tibetan Buddhism, told the BBC that the situation in Tibetan areas of China had become “very, very tense.” “Now today and yesterday, the Tibetan side is determined. The Chinese side also equally determined. So that means, the result: killing, more suffering,” the broadcaster quoted him as saying.

The Dalai Lama said the Chinese government should stop “clinging to its policy” of relying on force to control Tibetans because “they cannot control human minds.”

Paramilitary police shot dead at least seven protesters during clashes with hundreds of monks and lay Tibetans on Sunday afternoon that began at the Kirti monastery in Ngaba county, Sichuan province, the India-based Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy reported. Hundreds of people were also known to have been injured in the clashes after a “peaceful demonstration by thousands of people,” the centre said in a statement, citing eyewitness accounts.

One resident of Lhasa, the capital of China’s Tibet Autonomous Region, said hundreds of Tibetans were continuing protests in the city despite a military crackdown after riots erupted on Friday. Tibetan protesters took to the streets Saturday night, shouting that they wanted to rid Lhasa of all Chinese people, a Chinese resident told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa by telephone. “They burned buildings and smashed windows and everything else,” said the woman, who works at a Lhasa travel agency.

She said she heard rumours that police detained about 1,000 monks on Saturday and that 6,000 others were continuing their protests. Army reinforcements arrived Saturday from neighbouring Yunnan province, she said, as troops with tanks and armoured personnel carriers imposed de facto martial law in Lhasa.

An estimated 3,000 Tibetan protesters in the town of Xiahe, near Labrang monastery in ChinaÂ’s Gansu province, shouted slogans in support of the Dalai Lama Saturday and called for the release of the Panchen Lama, US-based Radio Free Asia reported. Police used tear gas after monks and lay Tibetans marched along the main street in the town, attacking shops, banks and other buildings, Xiahe residents said told dpa by telephone.

More protests were reported in Lithang and Sershul towns in Sichuan.
Posted by:Steve White

#11  NEWSVINE [paraph] > CHINA PREPARES FOR CRACKDOWN BY CLEARING TIBET/LLHASA STREETS OF WITNESSES; + REDDIT [paraph]> THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE HAVE "DISAPPEARED" OR HAVE BEEN MURDERED IN LLHASA - GENOCIDE IS PRC POLICY.

OTOH, CNN + FOX video footage > RIOT SIGN -"WHERE IS THE UN"?
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-03-17 23:32  

#10  WAFF.com Poster Thread > THE ECONOMIST > CHINA'S NEW ECONOMY CREATING MORE PROBLEMS AT HOME THAN ABROAD. Ordinary Chin getting hungrier as economy improves.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2008-03-17 22:36  

#9  China's exploding economic growth rate desperately needs a soft landing. A 'crash' generally leads to the government in power finding or creating a scapegoat. If that government is a totalitarian on (like China) the scapegoat hunt could become military. Taiwan? South Korea? Kazakhstan? Tibet is nothing more than a distraction in world power terms (though obviously not to Tibetans.)
Posted by: Glenmore   2008-03-17 22:23  

#8  I think he means demographically old, i.e. that with the one-child policy China has bootstrapped itself out of deep poverty but cannot leverage itself into higher living standards because of a massive wave of retirees coming down the pike vs. a smaller generation of workers (heavily male, so grandkids are going to be fewer, too).
Posted by: lotp   2008-03-17 18:13  

#7  China will get old before it gets rich.

Ummmm, China is already old, in fact it's been old for centuries.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2008-03-17 17:34  

#6  So China is hosting it's own leotards?
Posted by: Zebulon Angavick7428   2008-03-17 13:49  

#5  China will get old before it gets rich.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-03-17 12:19  

#4  What TW said. I check all labels. Of course, that assumes our appropriately charged Department checks compliance with marking and levies fines for relabeling. Hit and miss.

Now, all those 'China will be the superpower to surpass the US by 20xx', just remember that China too has serious internal problems and social contradictions that make it's ability to achieve those heavenly levels somewhat circumspect. Its just not the Tibetans who have 'issues' with the government in Beijing.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2008-03-17 11:19  

#3  Business Week magazine had a squib about international businesses in China in a recent issue. A representative number were surveyed, and 40% are in the process of or exploring either moving their business to less a volatile country like Viet Nam or Indonesia (from a business perspective, killing off your customers' customers creates volatility), or setting up any expansion of the business in a less volatile country.

First China manufactured its petard, now it is being hoisted with it. Look at the products being sold in WalMart, Kmart, Target, etc. Lots of labels now say Made in Indonesia/Viet Nam/ Malaysia/Egypt...
Posted by: trailing wife    2008-03-17 09:24  

#2  The crackdown is brought to you by....the same folks that support the military junta in Burma, the wonderful govt of the Sudan, Kimmie's Heaven on Earth, and the 2008 Beijing Oleolympics. Have we heard anything from our State Dept, except hand wringing platitudes?
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2008-03-17 08:37  

#1  This communist genocide outrage can't possibly be being brought to us by the friendly oriental folks who work hard for $ .19 per hour and fill our Walmart Stores with products.... can it? .... CAN IT??
Posted by: Besoeker   2008-03-17 08:13  

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