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This news is from the Guardian UK this morning (29 03 2012)
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India cracks down on Tibetan protests during Chinese leader's visit
Tibetan exile who set himself on fire dies as Hu Jintao arrives for summit



Jason Burke in Delhi

guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 28 March 2012 13.53 BST
Article history


A Tibetan exile is detained by police during a protest in Delhi against the 
visit of the Chinese president, Hu Jintao. Photograph: Adnan Abidi/Reuters

A Tibetan exile who set himself on fire in Delhi earlier this week has died, as 
Indian police and paramilitaries launch a security crackdown to prevent further 
protests or self-immolations during the visit of the Chinese premier, Hu Jintao.
Jamphel Yeshi, 27, suffered 90% burns after dousing himself with petrol during 
a protest on Monday, and authorities fear that more Tibetans will follow suit 
to protest at Chinese policies in their homeland. About 30 Tibetans have died 
and another dozen have been seriously injured in the past 13 months in similar 
protests, mainly inside China.
"Martyr Jamphel Yeshi's sacrifice will be written in golden letters in the 
annals of our freedom struggle," Dhondup Lhadar, an activist with the Tibetan 
Youth Congress, told the Associated Press. "He will live on to inspire and 
encourage the future generations of Tibetans."
Hu arrives in Delhi for a two-day summit of emerging nations, along with 
leaders from Brazil, Russia and South Africa.
Dharmendra Kumar, a senior police official, cited "international security 
concerns" to justify a ban on protests and press conferences by Tibetan 
activists in Delhi. "The law and order shouldn't deteriorate in the capital 
during the Brics summit," Kumar told the Hindustan Times.
Hundreds of armed security personnel patrolled areas of the Indian capital 
where Tibetans live on Wednesday, erecting barricades and refusing to let young 
people leave, but police spokesmen denied thatthousands of Tibetans were under 
effective "house arrest".
Rajan Bhagat of the Delhi police said: "There is no confinement. We are just 
keeping watch to make sure they are not coming into [the area] where the summit 
is happening."
Students of Tibetan origin have been confined to halls of residence and barred 
from meeting the media. Tenzin Kalsang, 18, said the police were escorting 
students at her hostel to and from classes. "When some students tried to 
protest .… then the police visited each hostel room and told us: 'If you do not 
listen, then we will put you in jail,'" she said.
Tempa, a travel agent in the area, said: "If we go out, then the police ask us 
to go inside our house." The usually bustling district, where tens of thousands 
Tibetan exiles live, was quiet.
India offered a haven to the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader, when he 
fled after a failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959. Since then the 
Tibetan population in India has grown to an estimated 100,000.
Tenzin Jigdal, an activist in Delhi, said: "I was born in India and feel really 
privileged to live in a free country. This is where the non-violent Tibetan 
movement was nurtured and inspired by the ideas of Mahatma Gandhi. It pains me 
that a freedom-loving democratic country like India bows down to China."
A well-known Tibetan writer, Tenzin Tsundue, was arrested by policemen in plain 
clothes during a tea break at a seminar on Tibet and India on Tuesday. Delhi 
police officials told the Times of India newspaper that Tsundue had been 
arrested due to his "notorious activities" in the southern city of Bangalore, 
where he had publicly protested during a previous visit by the Chinese premier.
Elsewhere, students of Tibetan origin were reported to be confined to halls of 
residence and barred from meeting media.
Indian authorities have repeatedly been criticised for failing to protect free 
speech in recent months. In January, protests by hardline local Muslim groups 
forced the author Salman Rushdie to cancel an appearance at a major literary 
festival.
Chinese relations with India are variable. The two emerging economic powers 
have extensive trade links and top Indian officials frequently visit Beijing, 
but India is concerned about growing Chinese military might. There is also 
tension over unresolved border disputes and Chinese support for India's hostile 
neighbour, Pakistan.
Many Indian analysts accept their country is unlikely to make good the economic 
and developmental gulf that separates the two regional rivals, but say that 
India's "soft power" and "cultural influence" is an advantage.
Beijing blames the Dalai Lama, who is based in the Indian hill town of 
Dharamasala, for fomenting unrest among the Tibetan population in China.
Monday's was the second self-immolation in India in recent months. Late last 
year, Sherab Tsedor, a young Tibetan exile, set himself on fire outside the 
Chinese embassy, suffering minor burns.


Tsedor said on Tuesday that he still supported self-immolation. "This is very 
important. World leaders and the United Nations still are not paying attention 
to us," he said. "They are always talking about human rights all over the world 
but when it comes to China or Tibet then they are silent-
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