China has so far sentenced 55 people for riots against Beijing’s rule that broke out in Tibet in March, state media reported as representatives of the Dalai Lama were in China for another round of strained talks.
It was the only overall number given since the government began sentencing people for their roles in the riots that rocked Tibet’s capital, Lhasa, on March 14. The figure was given by Baema Cewang, vice chairman of the Tibet regional government, the official Xinhua News Agency said late on Tuesday.
China detained more than 1,000 people in the aftermath of the rioting that targeted Chinese shops and businesses and left 22 people dead, according to the Chinese government.
“Following the violence, police detained 1,317 people, of whom 1,115 were subsequently released,” Xinhua said.
The rest were sent to trial, it said. Xinhua did not say what prison terms the 55 were given, what charges they were convicted of, whether they had lawyers or what had happened to the other 147 people who stood trial.
It was also unclear whether the number included the 30 people, including six Buddhist monks, China convicted in April in a one-day trial in Lhasa and sentenced to terms from life to three years in prison.
Beijing says the protests were part of a campaign by Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and his supporters to throw off Chinese rule in Tibet and sabotage the Beijing Olympics.
The Dalai Lama has denied involvement in violent acts and says he wants only greater autonomy for the region.
Many Tibetans insist they were an independent nation before troops invaded in 1950, while Beijing says the region has been part of its territory for centuries.
The Dalai Lama said on Monday that his efforts to engage China have failed to bring positive changes. He said he is unsure whether new talks between his envoys and Beijing over the fate of the region will produce any breakthroughs.
DOUBLE-MURDER CASE: The officer told the dispatcher he would check the locations of the callers, but instead headed to a pizzeria, remaining there for about an hour A New Jersey officer has been charged with misconduct after prosecutors said he did not quickly respond to and properly investigate reports of a shooting that turned out to be a double murder, instead allegedly stopping at an ATM and pizzeria. Franklin Township Police Sergeant Kevin Bollaro was the on-duty officer on the evening of Aug. 1, when police received 911 calls reporting gunshots and screaming in Pittstown, about 96km from Manhattan in central New Jersey, Hunterdon County Prosecutor Renee Robeson’s office said. However, rather than responding immediately, prosecutors said GPS data and surveillance video showed Bollaro drove about 3km
Tens of thousands of people on Saturday took to the streets of Spain’s eastern city of Valencia to mark the first anniversary of floods that killed 229 people and to denounce the handling of the disaster. Demonstrators, many carrying photos of the victims, called on regional government head Carlos Mazon to resign over what they said was the slow response to one of Europe’s deadliest natural disasters in decades. “People are still really angry,” said Rosa Cerros, a 42-year-old government worker who took part with her husband and two young daughters. “Why weren’t people evacuated? Its incomprehensible,” she said. Mazon’s
‘MOTHER’ OF THAILAND: In her glamorous heyday in the 1960s, former Thai queen Sirikit mingled with US presidents and superstars such as Elvis Presley The year-long funeral ceremony of former Thai queen Sirikit started yesterday, with grieving royalists set to salute the procession bringing her body to lie in state at Bangkok’s Grand Palace. Members of the royal family are venerated in Thailand, treated by many as semi-divine figures, and lavished with glowing media coverage and gold-adorned portraits hanging in public spaces and private homes nationwide. Sirikit, the mother of Thai King Vajiralongkorn and widow of the nation’s longest-reigning monarch, died late on Friday at the age of 93. Black-and-white tributes to the royal matriarch are being beamed onto towering digital advertizing billboards, on
SECRETIVE SECT: Tetsuya Yamagami was said to have held a grudge against the Unification Church for bankrupting his family after his mother donated about ¥100m The gunman accused of killing former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe yesterday pleaded guilty, three years after the assassination in broad daylight shocked the world. The slaying forced a reckoning in a nation with little experience of gun violence, and ignited scrutiny of alleged ties between prominent conservative lawmakers and a secretive sect, the Unification Church. “Everything is true,” Tetsuya Yamagami said at a court in the western city of Nara, admitting to murdering the nation’s longest-serving leader in July 2022. The 45-year-old was led into the room by four security officials. When the judge asked him to state his name, Yamagami, who