All contacts may be reached via phone or email:
+1 212-258-0071 sftmedia@studentsforafreetibet.org
LHADON TETHONG, Executive Director
A 32-year old Tibetan woman born and raised in Canada, Lhadon Tethong
is one of the most recognizable faces in the Tibet movement. She has
traveled the world to build a powerful youth movement for Tibet,
training and inspiring young people to become committed activists for
human rights and social justice. She has spoken to countless groups big
and small about the situation in Tibet – from a class of elementary
schoolchildren to a crowd of 66,000 at the 1998 Tibetan Freedom Concert
in Washington, D.C. She first became involved with Students for a Free
Tibet (SFT) in 1996, when she founded a chapter at University of King’s
College in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Lhadon was a leading force in scoring
an unprecedented campaign victory in 2000, when a coalition of Tibet
supporters and environmental and human rights activists prevented a
World Bank project that would have underwritten the resettlement of
tens of thousands of Chinese settlers in Tibet. Since then, she has
become a leading figure in the movement for Tibetan independence. In
August 2007, in the week preceding the one-year countdown to the
Beijing Olympics, Lhadon traveled to Beijing where she launched a blog
called ‘Beijing Wide Open’ to report on the Olympic preparations and
China’s political usage of the Games to legitimize the occupation of
Tibet. Her reporting received instant worldwide attention as she openly
traveled around the capital, speaking to journalists from Tiananmen
Square, and representing SFT activists who hung a protest banner on the
Great Wall of China on the eve of the one-year countdown. She was
detained the following day and deported from Beijing. Lhadon serves as
co-chair of the Olympics Campaign Working Group of the International
Tibet Support Network. She has worked for SFT since March 1999, and
currently serves as the Executive Director of Students for a Free Tibet
International.
Lhadon in the media: CBC News profile of Lhadon Blog boingboing.net on Lhadon’s reporting from Beijing on one-year countdown to Olympics Lhadon on The Hour with George Stroumboulpoulos CTV report on SFT use of technology with Lhadon
TENZIN DORJEE, Deputy Director
A 28-year old Tibetan man born and raised in Dharamsala, India, Tenzin
Dorjee (”Tendor”) graduated at the top of his class from upper Tibetan
Children’s Village school. He attended Brown University where he was
President of his Students for a Free Tibet chapter. A published writer
of essays and short stories, Tendor won International Campaign for
Tibet’s Light of Truth Essay Contest in 2002. Tendor served on SFT’s
Board of Directors from 2003 until resigning to apply for an SFT staff
position. He became Grassroots Coordinator for SFT International in
November 2004 and now serves as the Deputy Director. In April 2007, he
was the only Tibetan member of a team of activists who unfurled a
banner at the base camp of Mount Everest to protest China’s plans to
summit everest with the Olympic torch. The action took place on the day
China unveiled its proposed international torch relay route and
preempted China’s trial run of the torch to the Everest summit. The
action made worldwide headlines and Tendor is believed to be the first
Tibetan exile to return to Tibet to stage a demonstration. He is a
frequent spokesperson for the Tibetan youth movement, in both Tibetan
and English language media. In addition to his activism, he is a
musician, accomplished in both Tibetan and western folk music.
Tendor in the media: March 2008 NDTV interview with Tendor about Tibet situation CNN video of Tendor being arrested in Olympia, Greece during Olympic torch relay kickoff Video of April 2007 protest at Mt. Everest base camp Australia Broadcasting Company radio interview with Tendor about Everest protest
KATE WOZNOW, Campaigns Director
After traveling to Tibet and China in 1999, Kate, 27, joined a Students
for a Free Tibet chapter at the University of British Columbia. In
2001, she was part of an action team that grabbed headlines across
Canada after staging a protest in Beijing during a Canadian government
sponsored ‘Team Canada’ trade mission to China. After earning a
Political Science degree with Honors, Kate served as a member of the
inaugural Board of Directors for Students for a Free Tibet Canada.
Before becoming SFT Canada’s first National Coordinator in April 2005,
she worked for the Canadian Federation of Students and Rainforest
Action Network. Kate attributes her leadership and campaign skills to
SFT’s Youth Leadership Training Program, in which she has participated
as a student, volunteer, trainer, and coordinator. She became SFT’s
Campaigns Director since the fall of 2005 and has served as a media
coordinator and spokesperson for many of SFT’s high-profile actions
from Mt. Everest to Beijing to the recent torch relay protests against
China’s crackdown in Tibet. In April, Kate was detained and deported
from Hong Kong along with SFT Canada’s National Director Tsering Lama
two days before the arrival of the Olympic torch.
Kate in the media: Globe and Mail profile of “three Canadians [who] upstaged Beijing” Canada AM report on Kate’s deportation from Hong Kong Story about 2001 Tibet protest during Canada’s trade mission to China
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