Tibet’s government-in-exile on Saturday blamed China’s “hardline” leaders for a string of Tibetan self-immolations as it marked the anniversary of Tibetans’ failed revolt against Chinese rule.
In the past year, more than 20 Tibetans, most of them monks, have set themselves ablaze to protest Beijing’s rule, sparking international condemnation of what critics call religious and cultural repression.
Tibetan government-in-exile Prime Minister Lobsang Sangay said that while he strongly discouraged such extreme actions, the “fault lies squarely with the hardline leaders in Beijing.”
Beijing has heaped blame for the self-immolations on the Dalai Lama, who lives in exile in India, accusing the 76-year-old Buddhist leader and his followers of plotting to create “turmoil” in China’s Tibetan-inhabited areas.
However, Sangay said: “The self-immolations are an emphatic rejection of the empty promises of the so-called ‘socialist paradise’” and the lack of ability to protest in any other way in Tibet.
“Today, there is no space for any conventional protests such as hunger strikes, demonstrations and even peaceful gatherings in Tibet,” Sangay said.
“Tibetans are therefore taking extreme actions such as the one by 26 Tibetans who have -committed self-immolations since 2009,” Sangay said.
The Harvard academic’s statement comes as Tibetans around the world marked “National Uprising Day” to commemorate the abortive uprising against Chinese rule in 1959 that sent the Dalai Lama into exile in northern India.
Chinese authorities launched a huge security clampdown ahead of the sensitive anniversary of the uprising, which also marked the deadly anti-Chinese government riots that erupted in Tibet four years ago.
Sangay asked the UN to appoint a “special rapporteur” to visit the troubled Tibetan region in the statement issued from the northern Indian town of Dharamshala, where the Tibetan government-in-exile is headquartered.
In New Delhi, at least 1,000 protesters shouting: “We want freedom” paraded through the Indian capital to pay tribute to the men and women who they said had “sacrificed their lives” for the cause of the Tibetan people.
In Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal, nine protesters were arrested for chanting “anti-China” and “free Tibet” slogans near the Chinese embassy.
And in Australia, 150 demonstrators marched through Sydney, carrying placards with slogans such as “Tibetans are burning,” before staging a noisy rally outside the Chinese consulate.
Tibetan independence groups overseas were instigating the “carefully planned” self-immolations and offering “compensation” to victims, Xinhua news agency said late on Saturday, citing investigators.
Beijing says that Tibetans -enjoy religious freedom and have benefited from improved living standards brought on by China’s economic expansion.
However, the -government-in-exile rejected that claim and called for China to embrace a “Middle Way Policy” that seeks “genuine” autonomy for Tibetans.
“We hope that China’s upcoming leaders will initiate genuine change, and they find the wisdom to admit the government’s long-standing hardline policy in Tibet has failed,” Sangay said.
China begins the country’s biggest leadership transition in nearly a decade later this year, that will send its premier and president into retirement, stirring hopes it may soften its stance toward Tibet.
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