CHINA: Getting Worse in Tibet

  • by Emily-Anne Owen (beijing)
  • Inter Press Service

The monk is the third Tibetan to have burned himself to death in 2012, and the 15th since March last year. Nine of the 15, two of whom were nuns, have died.

Sonam Wangyal, a monk in his early forties, set himself alight last Sunday in the northeastern province Qinghai and was reported dead on Monday.

In a sign that the recent unprecedented wave of Tibetan self-immolations is spreading, this was the first incident in Qinghai. The majority of immolations have occurred in Sichuan’s Aba prefecture, the site of an important Tibetan monastery that has experienced increasingly harsh crackdowns.

Referred to by local Tibetans as the ‘Living Buddha Sopa’, Sonam Wangyal is the first reincarnate lama to have turned the flame on himself, and the oldest Tibetan to have died so far. Most so far have been in their twenties or teens.

Earlier this month two Tibetans named Tsultrim and Tennyi, both aged around 20, died after setting themselves on fire in the courtyard of a hotel in Ngaba County, Sichuan province. As they burnt themselves, they shouted out, ‘His Holiness the Dalai Lama must return to Tibet’ and ‘May His Holiness the Dalai Lama live for 10,000 years!’

Suicide is frowned upon in Tibetan Buddhism, but there is a tradition of self-sacrifice for the ‘benefit of others’, advocacy groups say.

'Sunday’s self-immolation was the first by a reincarnate lama. This was someone who is older, a mature person and an esteemed figure in his community. He would have been acutely aware of the ramifications for such an act in Tibetan Buddhism, and still chose to take his life in this way,' Kate Saunders, communications director for the International Campaign for Tibet (ICT), tells IPS.

Radio Free Asia reported that the monk wrote he was acting 'not for personal glory but for Tibet and the happiness of Tibetans' in leaflets he handed out prior to setting himself on fire.

He then drank kerosene and doused himself in it before setting himself alight. 'His body exploded in pieces (and the remains were) taken away by police,' said Radio Free Asia.

According to the Tibetan exile government in Dharmasala, India, thousands of locals staged a candlelight vigil demanding the release of his body following its confiscation by the police.

'Due to his position as a local spiritual leader, approximately 2,000 local Tibetans are said to have held a candlelight vigil urging the local police authorities to release his body,' the exile government said in a statement. The state-run Xinhua News Agency has since reported that the body has been handed to relatives.

'On the afternoon of Jan. 9, many fully-armed policemen showed up in the town, with guns, sticks, shields etc. The policemen dispersed the people demonstrating and did not allow the people to mourn in the temple,' Tsering Woeser, the Tibetan activist and author, wrote on her blog.

Earlier this week there were further signs of Tibetan unrest in a separate incident whena man was shot dead by police, sparking fierce protests in Gansu province, located in China’s northwest.

Xinhua reported that the man, Gurgo Tsering, was killed accidentally by police after he allegedly stole from a construction site.

ICT, however, cites local sources who claim the Tibetan died after police fired through the windows of his friend’s house. According to Radio Free Asia, Tibetans then attacked a local police station before police fired tear gas to stop the assault.

Both the immolations and protests have occurred during a growing period of unease between the government and Tibetan populations in China. Following protests in the 2008 Beijing Olympic year, the Communist Party has overseen a severe clampdown on religious freedom among Tibetans, who view their rightful leader as the exiled Dalai Lama.

Beijing blames the Dalai Lama for inciting unrest and has called the immolations 'terrorism in disguise'.

Just hours after Sonam Wangyal’s self-immolation, Xinhua wrote that senior officials had 'pledged stepped-up efforts to strengthen the management of monasteries in the fight against the Dalai Lama group.'

Officials must 'push forward the patriotic and legal education among monks and nuns... and dissuade them from being duped by separatist forces,' it said.

The newswire also reported that Sonam Wangyal set himself alight after a clandestine love affair with a local woman was discovered.

'(Crackdowns) are certainly counterproductive, but the Chinese have been at loss how to handle the Tibetans for the past 60 years,' Claude Arpi, author of The Fate of Tibet: When Big Insects Eat Small Insects, tells IPS. 'Today, the ‘collective’ leadership in Beijing believes that the more they will relax their grip, the worse will the situation become.'

For now there are fears that the death of the ‘Living Buddha’ will only lead to more protests and subsequent crackdowns.

'(The Living Buddha) is a religious leader who enjoys a much higher reputation and a greater influence than a normal monk. (His) death is different from a normal monk’s. It brings much greater shock and influence to Tibetans,’ Woeser tells IPS.

'The increasing deaths of monks means the situation of Tibetan areas is getting worse and worse.'

© Inter Press Service (2012) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service