Unprecedented: High-Altitude Free Tibet Protest on Mount Everest!

Posted on April 24th, 2007 by philo in Olympics, Protests, Protests in Tibet

EverestFreeTibetProtest41.jpg

Tibet Activists Demonstrate at Base Camp While Chinese Team Attempts Olympic Torch Ascent

Three Tibetan independence activists, including one Tibetan-American, were detained by Chinese authorities today after demonstrating at Mount Everest’s main base camp in Tibet, unfurling a banner reading “One World, One Dream, Free Tibet 2008� in English, and “Free Tibet� written in Tibetan and Chinese.

The protest was held on the eve of the International Olympic Committee’s announcement of the final Beijing 2008 Olympic torch relay route and as a Chinese team of climbers prepared a trial ascent of the mountain with the Olympic torch. The last reports were that the activists were in detention but had sent a text by phone to say they were safe. Dramatic video of the action will be available here soon.


View still-video captures of this daring action:
Photo Set 1, Photo Set 2

watch a short video from the protest on YouTube

Click here to read the full press release. Or go below the fold for the complete text.

Check out press coverage this action is receiving from Reuters, BBC News and the Associated Press.

Everestfreetibetprotest9


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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 25th, 2007

*Photos and video footage available*

Contact: Lhadon Tethong in Kathmandu, +977 980-341-7525
Tenzin Choeying in Kathmandu, +977 980-341-6982
Kate Woznow in New York, +1 917-418-4133

TIBET ACTIVISTS PROTEST BEIJING 2008 OLYMPICS ON MT. EVEREST
Tibetan-American Amongst those Detained in High Altitude Protest

Kathmandu – Three Tibetan independence activists, including one Tibetan-American, were detained by Chinese authorities today after demonstrating and unfurling a banner reading “One World, One Dream, Free Tibet 2008� in English, and “Free Tibet� written in Tibetan and Chinese, at Mount Everest’s main base camp in Tibet.

The protest was held on the eve of the International Olympic Committee’s announcement of the final Beijing 2008 Olympic torch relay route and as a Chinese team of climbers prepared a trial ascent of the mountain. If approved, China will take the torch over Mount Everest and through Tibet, a move that Tibetans and their supporters decry as offering international approval to China’s brutal occupation of Tibet.

“The Chinese government hopes to use the 2008 Olympic Games to conceal the brutality of its occupation of Tibet and win the international community’s acceptance as a modern power on the world stage,â€? said Lhadon Tethong, the Executive Director of Students for a Free Tibet, from Kathmandu. “Mount Everest is not in China, it’s in Tibet, very near where Chinese border guards shot and killed unarmed Tibetan refugees last September. The International Olympic Committee has no business promoting the Chinese government’s political agenda by allowing the torch to be run through Tibet.â€?

According to an eyewitness report, Chinese authorities detained the three activists, including Tenzin Dorjee, a Tibetan-American, who was wearing a t-shirt
that read “No Torch through Tibet.� Prior to his detention, he lit a symbolic torch of Tibetan freedom and sang the Tibetan National Anthem. Tenzin Dorjee is the first known exiled Tibetan to stage a protest inside Tibet. At least one other American has also been detained in conjunction with the protest.

“Tibetans worldwide are looking to the 2008 Beijing Olympics as an unprecedented opportunity to expose the truth about Chinese rule in Tibet,â€? said Tenzin Choeying, the National Director of Students for a Free Tibet India. “The torch of freedom continues to burn brightly in the hearts and minds of Tibetans everywhere and China can expect more protests of this nature in the months leading up to and during the Games.”

The high altitude demonstration coincided with the eighteenth birthday of the Panchen Lama, Gendhun Choekyi Nyima – Tibetan Buddhism’s most important spiritual leader after the Dalai Lama – and a political prisoner of the Chinese government. He and his family have been held since 1995, when he was only six years old. China has denied all requests by foreign diplomats and United Nations representatives to see him. Tibetans and supporters are staging protests for his release at Chinese embassies and consulates worldwide today.

Students for a Free Tibet (SFT) is a network of young people and activists campaigning for Tibetan independence, with 650 chapters in more than thirty countries worldwide. SFT is based in New York, with offices in Vancouver, London, and Dharamsala, India. SFT is working to shine the Olympic spotlight on China’s occupation of Tibet.

www.studentsforafreetibet.org

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