International community apprised on Tibetans’ plight
October 23rd, 2011 - 5:31 pm ICT by IANSDharamsala, Oct 23 (IANS) Tibetans in exile are reaching out to the international community to intervene in ending human rights violations of Tibetans in China.
An official of the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA), based in this Himachal Pradesh town, told IANS Sunday a parliamentary delegation was in New Delhi last week to apprise various embassies of the ongoing repression by China.
“During the visit to Delhi, the delegation met officials and functionaries of more than a dozen embassies, including the US, Britain, France, Denmark, Norway and Finland,” a CTA spokesperson said.
He said the delegation, headed by parliament speaker Penpa Tsering, also met members of the European Union.
The CTA said nine Tibetans immolated themselves in protest against China’s policies, called for freedom and the return of the Dalai Lama to his homeland. It said five of the nine died.
Meanwhile, a French lawmaker has said: “France’s voice must be heard on the international stage and urged the government to implement a policy which would ensure enforcement of human rights in China.”
“I have been closely following the tragic events occurring in the Ngaba region,” Jean-Louis Bianco, a deputy in the French National Assembly and the Vice President of Parliamentary Group for Tibet, said in a statement, according to a post on the CTA official website.
“I have also read the letter sent by the president of the association Emergency Tibet to French President Nicolas Sarkozy, urging him to publicly condemn the repression against Tibetans,” he said.
Thousands of Tibetans Oct 19 participated in prayers here and other parts of the country to express solidarity with people of Tibet.
“His Holiness the Dalai Lama and a large number of monks and nuns participated in a morning-prayer session in Dharamsala and observed a day-long fast for those who have immolated themselves in Tibet,” Thubten Samphel, a spokesperson for the CTA, said.
On that day, Tibetan Prime Minister-in-exile Lobsang Sangay said: “For over the last 60 years, since the Communist China’s occupation of Tibet, the Tibetan people have been undergoing untold suffering.”
“We would like to appeal to the Chinese government to immediately stop its repressive policies in Tibet, and to resolve the issue of Tibet through peaceful means. We would like to appeal to the United Nations to send fact-finding delegations into Tibet,” said the senior fellow of Harvard Law School, who has never visited his ancestral land.
The Dalai Lama along with many of his supporters fled Tibet and took refuge in India when Chinese troops moved in and took control of Lhasa in 1959.
He then headed a Tibetan government-in-exile which never won recognition from any country.
India is home to around 100,000 Tibetans.
- Exiles predict more trouble in Tibet - Mar 17, 2012
- Adopt liberal policies for Tibet, exiles urge China - Jan 07, 2012
- Mother of three immolates herself in Tibet - May 31, 2012
- Tibetan youth who immolated himself cremated - Mar 30, 2012
- Respect human rights, Tibetan exiles ask China - Dec 10, 2011
- Two more self-immolations in Tibet - Apr 20, 2012
- Tibet's unique culture in peril, says PM-in-exile - Oct 19, 2011
- Two self-immolations in Tibet - Mar 05, 2012
- Prayers, hunger strikes mark Tibetan sacred festival - Feb 22, 2012
- Fast, prayers mark Tibetan New Year festival (Lead) - Feb 22, 2012
- Exiled Tibetans ask China to stop repressive policy - Nov 04, 2011
- Dalai Lama blames Beijing for self-immolations - Apr 21, 2012
- France concerned over self-immolations in Tibet - Jan 21, 2012
- Exiles ask BRICS to raise Tibet with Hu - Mar 28, 2012
- Respect rights of Tibetans: European Parliament - Oct 28, 2011
Tags: central tibetan administration, dalai lama, french national assembly, french president nicolas, human rights in china, human rights violations, international stage, jean louis bianco, members of the european union, monks and nuns, morning prayer, nicolas sarkozy, parliament speaker, parliamentary delegation, parliamentary group, penpa tsering, people of tibet, prayer session, thubten, tibetans in china