Dharamshala:
Dhondup Wangchen, the Tibetan filmmaker who was arrested by the Chinese
government for documenting the current situation in Tibet and Tibetan
people's aspiration for return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama to Tibet,
has been sentenced to six years in prison, according to information
received by the Central Tibetan Administration.
The sentence was pronounced was on 28 December 2009, according to the report. But it is not known where the filmmaker was tried.
Dhondup Wangchen, aged 35, was arrested with his monk assistant named Jigme Gyatso on 26 March 2008 for making the film “Leaving Fear Behind” in Tibet, which documents the lives of Tibetans under China's rule, views about His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Beijing Olympics.
Jigme Gyatso was released on bail seven months later, on 15 October 2008, and reported that he had been tortured in detention.
Wangchen
was initially detained at the Ershilibu detention center in Sining,
Amdo. He was transferred a few months later to a government-run
guesthouse nearby, probably for the purpose of interrogation, before
being sent to the No. 1 Detention Center in Sining. Wangchen has been
suffering from hepatitis B, for which he said he has been denied
adequate medical treatment, the International Campaign for Tibet, the
US based rights group said in its report on 17 September 2009.
The
Chinese government arbitrarily replaced the lawyer chosen by Wangchen,
Li Dunyong, with a government-appointed lawyer in July 2009. The Human
Rights Watch strongly condemned the move as a “violation of China’s
criminal procedure law and its obligations under international human
rights law, which guarantee criminal defendants the right to choose
their own defense counsel and to meet with their counsel while in
detention”.
Wangchen's lawyer, Li Dunyong reported that his
client had been tortured in order to extract a confession and that some
of the injuries he sustained as a result were still painful a year
later. During that discussion Wangchen stated that he intended to plead
not guilty and had admitted no wrongdoing during his 16 months in
detention.
“A verdict against Dhondup Wangchen under the present
circumstances will have no legitimacy whatsoever,” Human Rights Watch
said in its statement on 3 August. |