Free Tibet blog

 


Keep up to date with what Free Tibet's staff and volunteers are doing in our blog, where we will be adding brief reports on our work and experiences.

 December 10, Copenhagen

I have just spent three exhilarating days at the UN's Climate Change
Summit in Copenhagen.

Free Tibet travelled to Copenhagen, together with other Tibet groups and
Tibetans who had flown in from Dharamsala, to focus attention on the
looming climate change crisis on the Tibetan Plateau.

Our intention was to open the eyes of the world to the serious warming
of the Tibetan Plateau where temperatures are rising twice as fast as
anywhere else on the planet. This has grave implications for the
Plateau, or the "Tibet Third Pole" as we are calling it: the Plateau is
the largest store of ice anywhere outside the north and south poles. It
hosts 40,000 glaciers, many of which could have disappeared within 30
years according to the latest scientific assessments. Tibet's glaciers
feed Asia's major rivers including the Indus, Bhramaputra, Mekong,
Yellow and Yangtse. If the glaciers melt and become extinct, the
consequences for the water supply of approximately one billion people
downstream in South and Southeast Asia could not be more serious.




The Tibet Third Pole team in Copenhagen

The Tibet Third Pole team, that had travelled to Copenhagen to
participate in a UN climate change summit for the first time, was
determined to raise awareness of this impending disaster, as well as
Chinese government policies that seek to forcibly remove Tibetan nomads
from the Plateau and end the nomadic way of life. The removal policy
makes no sense whatsoever: over thousands of years the nomads have
acquired a vast store of traditional ecosystem knowledge that has helped
them to protect and preserve the Plateau. Their expert stewardship of
this fragile environment has never mattered more than now when climate
change threatens the existence of the glaciers. All of which makes
China's policy to remove the nomads from the Plateau all the more
senseless.

Our Tibet Third Pole team has been working tirelessly to bring this
message to Copenhagen. Everywhere we went fellow participants welcomed
the Tibetans amongst us with open arms, telling us how pleased they were
that Tibetans had come to the summit to deliver this crucial message and
to demand action. At the conference we have been calling for an
immediate halt to the policy to forcibly remove the nomads; we have also
been calling for an international investigation team, including expert
independent scientists, to assess the ecosystems of the Plateau and to
recommend a way forward that encourages land-use policies that are in
the interest of all, and not just China's narrow, self-interested
political priorities in Tibet.

Matt Whitticase, Free Tibet

Read more about the Third Pole
See more updates from Copenhagen on the Third Pole website
Read more about Free Tibet's nomadic campaign
Read an AFP article about Tibetans at Copenhagen
TAKE ACTION: Join the Third Pole Tibet groups by signing an electronic petition to Chinese leaders

                                  


March 10, London

 

My Experience as a Supporter of Free Tibet

It was my first time lobbying my MP. In fact my first visit to the Houses of Parliament.  There was a sense of excitement, action and solidarity as we entered Parliament. I was exercising my right to see my MP and my right of freedom of speech unlike the Tibetans in Tibet I am supporting.

My MP was interested in hearing details of the current situation in Tibet and moved by the life experiences of Tibetan people I had met in Dharamsala, India.  I was however surprised that he was unaware that the British government had recently weakened its position on Tibet.

I left feeling that my concerns were heard and that I had been a part of a highly successful day of action and I am determined to continue working for a Free Tibet.

Vivienne Briscoe, Tibet supporter

Read the views of more people who took part in the mass lobby here


(Left) The Tibetan flag is held outside Parliament during the mass lobby and (right) Reigate Free Tibet group with MP Peter Ainsworth in Parliament

                                 

 

 

March 7, London

50th anniversary uprising march

It was great to see so many people take to the streets of London to mark fifty years of resistance in Tibet.

People of all ages and backgrounds joined us outside the Chinese Embassy at
Portland Place, filling the precession with Tibetan flags and banners demanding a free Tibet. As we marched down Oxford Street, past Piccadilly Circus and into Trafalgar Square, passers-by were drawn to the colourful spectacle and many took photos and honked their car horns in support of the march.

Palden Gyatso, who led the march, addressed a crowd of around a thousand
Tibet supporters, telling us of his horrific experiences as a political prisoner in Tibet. Palden spent a total of 33 years in prison after first being arrested for peacefully protesting during the Tibetan uprising of 1959, when some 86,000 Tibetans were slaughtered by the invading Chinese forces. Palden was then subjected to the most barbaric forms of torture, and his story galvanised the crowd in their chants for human rights in Tibet.

Other speakers took to the stage, and spoke about the current situation in
Tibet, the mass lobby of Parliament on March 10 and freedom for China as well as Tibet. It's good to see so much support for the human rights of the Chinese people too, as both causes are equally important, and the Chinese and Tibetan people can be unified in demanding the human rights and freedoms which are denied by the current regime.

Fifty years is certainly too long, but the protests which swept across Tibet have clearly engergised the movement, and whatever background supporters are from, whether Tibetan, Chinese or Western, after fifty years, the call for a free Tibet hasn't merely persevered, it's stronger than ever.

Gabriel Hartnell, Fundraising Officer at Free Tibet, London

More photos and videos from the march
The Dalai Lama's statement on the fiftieth anniversary of the Tibetan uprising


                                 

 

February 2, London

During the press conference at No 10. Downing Street, the British Prime Minister no doubt caused visiting Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao to shift in his shoes, when he urged, “further dialogue on the Chinese Government to resolve the underlying issues in Tibet But frankly these few lines, in a speech that focussed on trade, paid only lip service to a situation which the Government in Exile has warned could lead to further political unrest and appealed to Governments across the globe.“to actively intervene so that unfortunate incidences of March 2008 may not be repeated”.

The PM’s statement was probably not what they had in mind. Mr Brown, like other members of his cabinet, is hiding behind “regular dialogue” processes as evidence of British Government action on human rights. Yet even senior civil servants recognise that after more than ten years, the 2009 UK- China Human Rights Dialogue round failed to deliver. The Sino Tibetan talks collapsed months ago, with no sign of being resurrected.

Some might argue that perhaps behind closed doors Mr Brown took a stronger stand on Tibet, addressed some of the specific issues, for example secured guarantees that snipers on rooftops in Lhasa and the military build-up across Tibet is not an indication of plans to use the army against peaceful protesters as happened in March 2008. But is that realistic? Unlikely.

Last week, the Government published “The UK and China: A Framework for Engagement”. Securing ‘greater respect for human rights’.

Instead of requiring an end to arrest and detention without trial, as the UN has demanded from China, the British Government is satisfied with just a ‘reduction’ of administrative detention. Appalling to arrest and detain thousands without trial, but hundreds is acceptable?

The British Government also aims to secure China’s ratification of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). Is this what the PM was referring to when he said in the press conference that the UK will “seek rapid progress towards all human rights standards” If it is, I wish him luck! China signed the ICCPR more than ten years ago and despite many promises has still failed to bring it into force.

Listening to Wen Jiabao’s speech at the press conference was rather more illuminating. Personally, I cannot help but assume that his references to “a fresh new starting point” and that there is “no baggage of history between us”; was a direct reference to the UK’s recent change in policy in which the Foreign Secretary reversed more than ninety years of UK foreign policy when he recognised Tibet as part of the People’s Republic of China.

Tragically it seems the ‘blockage’ the Foreign Office referred to when it was justifying the change to the UK’s position on Tibet wasn’t with regard to securing human rights in Tibet or China but was actually about strengthening the UK’s trading relationship.

The British Government it seems has betrayed the people of Tibet for promises of greater access to Chinese markets. As dawn raids take place on Tibetan homes, people are ‘disappeared’, torture continues and there is the very real risk of a repeat of the murders of unarmed Tibetan civilians which took place last spring, I wonder if the British Government will conclude that it was worth it?

Stephanie Brigden, Director of Free Tibet, in London

Downing Street's report on the meeting, with video
UK & China: a framework for engagement
Central Tibetan Administration statement

                                 

 

 

November 6, Geneva

 

Waiting for my accreditation to the United Nations Committee Against Torture session, I wondered when we would see the Tibetan flag flying in front of the Palais des Nations alongside the other member states. 

The UN is often criticised for not having teeth, for failing to protect.  But this week, the UN is acting where many Governments have failed. The Committee Against Torture is holding the Chinese Government publicly accountable for a worsening human rights situation in Tibet.

 

The meeting room was packed, with committee members from Africa, Europe, the Americas and Asia, with written submissions, including Free Tibet’s, piled high on their desks. The translators sat above us listening and giving impassioned translations of the NGO presentations. Representatives from Falun Gong spoke of restrictions on religious practices, a member of the Uighur community spoke of his friends’ torture – a man hung by his wrists until the flesh tore away - and then it was our turn.

We spoke of the fate of more than a thousand Tibetans whose whereabouts remain unknown and for whom we fear the worst, the hundreds of prisoners who were transported on the Gormo Lhasa railway to unknown locations. On China’s denial of the use of lethal force to put down the protests which swept across the Tibetan plateau, despite witness testimonies and our own brutal photographic evidence of young dead Tibetan men with bullet wounds in their chests. We outlined how the legal system is used to safeguard the interests of the Communist Party of China and does not protect the rights of the peoples of Tibet and China. We wanted to tell them so much and had such little time, we wondered had we done enough.

Then Phuntsog Nyidrol, in her national dress took to the floor and despite her petite size spoke with a strong and confident voice about her years in Drapchi prison in Lhasa. How she had been beaten, had her nails removed from each finger, heard testimonies of how a fellow Tibetan nun had been raped with an electric baton and how trained dogs had been set upon their naked bodies. And as Phuntsog spoke in her own national language, Tibetan, in a UN forum, and we all sat listening to the English translation through our head phones, I realised the importance of giving witness to these crimes.

Stephanie Brigden, Director of Free Tibet, at the United Nations Committee Against Torture in Geneva

Click here to read our submission to the UN Committee Against Torture