For Immediate Release
MONK SHOT BY CHINESE POLICE AFTER SELF-IMMOLATING IN PROTEST IN TIBET
Hong
Kong – A Tibetan monk was shot by Chinese police today after he set
himself on fire at 1:40pm Beijing Time in Ngaba town (Chinese: Aba) in
eastern Tibet. According to eyewitnesses, Tape, a monk in his 20's from
Kirti monastery, was shouting slogans and carrying a homemade Tibetan
flag with an image of the Dalai Lama on it when he set himself on fire
at the crossroads of the main market. Eyewitness reports indicate the
police fired three shots at Tape after he set himself on fire. At least
one of the bullets made contact. His body was removed almost
immediately and it is unclear whether he survived the incident.
"That a young monk felt compelled to self-immolate in protest shows
that China's repression in Tibet is driving Tibetans to the brink,"
said Lhadon Tethong, Executive Director of Students for a Free Tibet.
"This desperate action is a reflection of the intense frustration and
pain that all Tibetans are feeling after nearly a year of being
mercilessly targeted and oppressed by the Chinese authorities, and
after having endured 50 years of subjugation at the hands of the
Chinese government."
Monks from Kirti monastery in Dharamsala, India confirmed from
multiple eyewitnesses in Tibet that Tape's protest came shortly after
1,000 monks, including Tape, were stopped from entering Kirti
monastery's main prayer hall to engage in prayers for the 3rd day of
Losar, the Tibetan New Year. After being blocked from entering the
hall, the monks sat down outside and were preparing to go ahead with
their prayers when older monks pleaded with them to disperse. The monks
complied and went back to their rooms. Shortly afterwards, Tape came
out of the monastery and once on the street he took out the flag and
began walking towards the main market just a few minutes away.
Dozens of Tibetans from Ngaba and the surrounding area were killed
last year, and many more disappeared and were imprisoned, when protests
swept across Tibet. Graphic photos of Tibetans shot and killed by
Chinese forces in Ngaba were some of the only images of the fatalities
in the protests that reached the outside world. Following the protests,
the monks of Kirti monastery were the targets of some of the most
extreme torture, abuse and intimidation by Chinese authorities. The
entire region has been under lockdown for the past year and in recent
months foreigners have been blocked from entering Ngaba.
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