Asserting that two Tibetans convicted of a series of bombings might have been framed, human rights activists are appealing for foreign pressure on China to rescind a death sentence imposed on one of them.
Activists said the Tibetans -- one a senior Buddhist monk -- were denied a fair trial and suggested they might have been targeted as revenge for their peaceful activism.
"It's unconscionable to impose a death sentence under such conditions," said a statement by Liu Qing, president of New York-based Human Rights in China.
In addition to Liu's group, Amnesty International, the International Campaign for Tibet and the government-in-exile of the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader, are calling for pressure on Beijing to revoke the sentence.
China angrily rejects foreign government appeals in court cases as interference in its affairs, and dismisses human rights groups claims as biased. But Beijing sometimes responds to pressure even while publicly denying that it is doing so.
Activists accuse Beijing of misusing the international antiterror campaign as an excuse to crush peaceful pro-independence sentiment in Tibet and the northwestern Muslim region of Xinjiang.
The monk, Tenzin Deleg Rinpoche, received a suspended death sentence Monday from a court in western China's Sichuan province. His aide, Lobsang Dhondup, was sentenced to death.
Death sentences in China are automatically appealed but rarely overturned. Suspended death sentences usually are commuted later to long prison terms.
"We appeal to the international community to put pressure on the Chinese government to rescind the death sentence," the Dalai Lama's government said in a statement from its base in Dharamsala, India.
Seventy percent of middle and elementary schools now conduct English classes entirely in English, the Ministry of Education said, as it encourages schools nationwide to adopt this practice Minister of Education (MOE) Cheng Ying-yao (鄭英耀) is scheduled to present a report on the government’s bilingual education policy to the Legislative Yuan’s Education and Culture Committee today. The report would outline strategies aimed at expanding access to education, reducing regional disparities and improving talent cultivation. Implementation of bilingual education policies has varied across local governments, occasionally drawing public criticism. For example, some schools have required teachers of non-English subjects to pass English proficiency
‘FORM OF PROTEST’: The German Institute Taipei said it was ‘shocked’ to see Nazi symbolism used in connection with political aims as it condemned the incident Sung Chien-liang (宋建樑), who led efforts to recall Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Lee Kun-cheng (李坤城), was released on bail of NT$80,000 yesterday amid an outcry over a Nazi armband he wore to questioning the night before. Sung arrived at the New Taipei City District Prosecutors’ Office for questioning in a recall petition forgery case on Tuesday night wearing a red armband bearing a swastika, carrying a copy of Adolf Hitler’s Mein Kampf and giving a Nazi salute. Sung left the building at 1:15am without the armband and apparently covering the book with a coat. This is a serious international scandal and Chinese
TRADE: The premier pledged safeguards on ‘Made in Taiwan’ labeling, anti-dumping measures and stricter export controls to strengthen its position in trade talks Products labeled “made in Taiwan” must be genuinely made in Taiwan, Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰) said yesterday, vowing to enforce strict safeguards against “origin laundering” and initiate anti-dumping investigations to prevent China dumping its products in Taiwan. Cho made the remarks in a discussion session with representatives from industries in Kaohsiung. In response to the US government’s recent announcement of “reciprocal” tariffs on its trading partners, President William Lai (賴清德) and Cho last week began a series of consultations with industry leaders nationwide to gather feedback and address concerns. Taiwanese and US officials held a videoconference on Friday evening to discuss the
PERSONAL DATA: The implicated KMT members allegedly compiled their petitions by copying names from party lists without the consent of the people concerned Judicial authorities searched six locations yesterday and questioned six people, including one elderly Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) member and five KMT Youth League associates, about alleged signature forgery and fraud relating to their recall efforts against two Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) legislators. After launching a probe into alleged signature forgery and related fraud in the KMT’s recall effort, prosecutors received a number of complaints, including about one petition that had 1,748 signatures of voters whose family members said they had already passed away, and also voters who said they did not approve the use of their name, Taipei Deputy Chief Prosecutor