Sunday January 20, 2013
2nd Tibetan self-immolates in China in a week
BEIJING: A young Tibetan in southwestern China has died after setting himself on fire, rights groups have reported, marking the second self-immolation protest in a week and lifting the total to nearly 100.
London-based Free Tibet said in a statement Saturday that a 28-year-old man identified by the single name Dupchoek, died Friday afternoon in Drachen township in the Aba Tibetan autonomous prefecture of China's Sichuan province.
Free Tibet said that 97 Tibetans have self-immolated since February 2009 to protest against Beijing's rule in Tibet. According to a list on the group's website, about 75 of them have died.
Many Tibetans in China accuse the government of religious repression and eroding their culture, as the country's majority Han ethnic group increasingly moves into historically Tibetan areas.
China rejects that, saying Tibetans enjoy religious freedom. Beijing also points to huge ongoing investment it says has brought modernisation and a better standard of living to Tibet.
International Campaign for Tibet, based in Washington, also reported the self-immolation at the same location, though identified the man by the single name of Tsering and described him as being in his twenties.
US-based Radio Free Asia identified the dead man as 28-year-old Tsering Phuntsok.
There was no immediate explanation for the discrepancy in names. Other details of the three reports were broadly similar.
Radio Free Asia also said 97 Tibetans have set themselves on fire since February 2009.
The latest self-immolation followed the burning to death on January 12 of a young Tibetan man in northwestern Gansu province, the first reported case since early December.
Authorities have sought to crack down on the trend by arresting those it accuses of inciting such acts, and has ordered judicial bodies to charge anyone aiding or abetting them with murder.
State media reported on Tuesday that Gansu police had arrested seven people who allegedly incited a 26-year-old ethnic Tibetan man to set himself ablaze in October last year.
The rate of self-immolations spiked in November in the lead-up to the Chinese Communist Party's once-a-decade power handover, where Xi Jinping was named party chief.
Beijing routinely accuses the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and his "clique" of inciting such acts of protest to push a separatist agenda.
The Dalai Lama, who says he is not seeking Tibetan independence but greater autonomy, fled his homeland in 1959 after a failed uprising. He has since based himself in the Indian hill town of Dharamshala. - AFP
- Want a gun? Just print it out

- Lock-up deaths: Dharmendran's son will never be able to celebrate Father's Day again, says mother

- Pakatan MPs will attend Parliament swearing-in, says Anwar
- Two college students among five arrested for mass robbery
- Scrap metal dealer killed in gang territorial war
- Mentally disabled man missing since Sunday
- Rush to escape storm proves deadly
- Peat fires and the ever-repeating haze
- CCTV to shed light on missing hawker
- Boy nabbed for buying air rifles
- Airsoft guns are easily available online
- Many taking precautions against haze
- Four times as many hotspots in Sumatra now
- 2014 Budget set for Oct 25

- AirAsia bags prestigious awards again
- Nazir Razak: Rising likelihood of major reversal of hot money out from Asia
- Blue chips edge higher in volatile trade (Update)
- Eversendai tendering for RM8b of projects
- Inter-Pacific Research values AirAsia X at RM1.66
- Affin Research maintains "Add" call on Berjaya Sports Toto
- KLCI opens higher, Genting up
- CIMB Research raises Perisai target price to RM2
- Trading ideas: MAHB, MMHE, Berjaya Sports Toto
- Affin Research maintains "Buy" on IJM Land
- Billionaire Icahn seeks US$16bil Dell share buyback
- CIMB Research upgrades Malaysia’s Small Cap sector to Outperform
- Microsoft says it freed millions of computers worldwide from criminal botnet
- Kandinsky work sold for for US$21mil but misses the mark
- Singapore pressures Indonesia to identify firms behind haze
- Malaysia-Kuwait tie-up to boost Islamic finance training
- FedEx eyes record win at Wimbledon
- Brazilian Massa looking ahead to team’s revival
- V Shem-Khim Wah face tough opener in Singapore Open
- Springboks’ De Villiers may miss final
- Results worldwide
- Former world junior champ Zulfadli in main draw
- Star Wallaby winger fit to face Lions
- Hesson laments NZ’s failure to grab chance
- Omega Pharma pin Tour hopes on Mark
- Shahidan needs Cabinet nod to hold posts, says Khairy
- Direct flight now to Naypyitaw for Malaysian SEA Games squad
- Aussie Kulacz hopes to repeat 2009 Selangor Masters triumph
- India’s Anirban relying on short putter for success
- Iain steels himself for a good show at Seri Selangor
- Justin’s win inspires English golfers
- Two-year-old makes touching request at her dad’s funeral
- Rush to escape storm proves deadly
- Boy nabbed for buying air rifles
- CCTV to shed light on missing hawker
- Airsoft guns are easily available online
- Mentally disabled man missing since Sunday
- Medium threatens couple with black magic
- Peat fires and the ever-repeating haze
- Four times as many hotspots in Sumatra now
- New DAP man turns on his party after elections
- Boy nabbed for buying air rifles
- Inter-Pacific Research values AirAsia X at RM1.66
- Airsoft guns are easily available online
- Peat fires and the ever-repeating haze
- Many taking precautions against haze
- Pakatan MPs will attend Parliament swearing-in, says Anwar
- Malaysia-Kuwait tie-up to boost Islamic finance training
- MAHB sets May 2, 2014 as KLIA2 revised opening date
- Fitch Affirms Genting and Genting Singapore at 'A-'/ Stable
- Ahmad Zahid: Many foreign workers did not settle their medical fees

