
August 24, 2008
London: The Chinese embassy in London was the backdrop for a strong statement of commitment from the Tibetan community in Britain and their supporters. As the closing ceremony of the Olympics commenced in Beijing, the gathered crowd listened to speeches by Tenzin Dorjee, Deputy Director of Students for a Free Tibet, Sonam Frasi, member of the Tibetan government in exile and Terry Bettger, Campaigns Coordinator of Students for a Free Tibet UK. Pledges were taken both by Tibetans and Tibet supporters to continue campaigning for Tibetans inside Tibet.
Tenzin Dorjee addressed the crowd, saying "The Chinese government are vulnerable because they care about their image and they seek legitimacy, which is why they have spent billions of dollars on these Olympics. We must use their vulnerabilities as non-violent tools in our struggle for Tibetan freedom." Sonam Frasi spoke of the ongoing need to work towards a political resolution between the Chinese government and the Tibetan government in exile before leading a rousing oath: "Mahong par boddon dentha ma salbar, bodkyi chidon la muthue rangnue gangthon gyi badtson jagyu damcha zhugyu yin? [I hereby vow that until the Tibet issue is resolved, I will dedicate myself to the best of my potential to the just cause of Tibet]. Terry Bettger spoke of the eight protests carried out in Beijing by Students for a Free Tibet activists, and said to those gathered ?Even when the Chinese military do all they can to stifle the cry for freedom from the Tibetan people, we still hear it, and we will amplify that courageous Tibetan voice so that it echoes around the world.?
The rally was the last of a series of events in London during the Olympic games organised by UK based Tibet support groups, which included a bicycle rally, a Tibetan women?s protest, a formal raising of the Tibetan flag opposite the Chinese embassy and a march ending with the presentation of a letter to Prime Minister Gordon Brown calling for a strong stance from the British government in support of the Tibetan people.

Last week, eight American citizens were detained in Beijing for participating in pro-Tibetan sovereignty protests near the site of the 2008 Olympics, with Students for a Free Tibet. Two videobloggers who documented those protest and guerrilla art installations evaded detention, and spoke to Boing Boing TV on Friday Beijing time about why they were there, what they witnessed, and why it mattered.
Jay Dedman and Ryanne Hodson of Ryanishungry.com spoke to us over Skype from a hostel in Beijing. One of the actions they documented in photo and video was the hanging of an “LED throwies” light banner, shown below, which read “FREE TIBET.” We agreed to hold this Boing Boing tv episode until after we received word that they’d safely left the country. They have returned home, so I am posting the piece today.
View the original post at http://www.boingboing.net/2008/08/25/bbtv-beijing-intervi.html
August 24, 2008
Contacts:
In Asia: Lhadon Tethong, Executive Director, and Kate Woznow, Campaigns Director,
+66 846 517 681 or +1 917 289 0219
***Photos and bios available at http://freetibet2008.org/globalactions/beijing10
Students for a Free Tibet activists worldwide welcome the news of the release of eight American Tibet supporters jailed by Chinese authorities in Beijing during the Olympics. Students for a Free Tibet calls for the immediate release of Briton Mandie Mckeown and Tibetan-German Florian Norbu Gyanatshang, who have been held since early morning on August 21st.
"After two days of negative publicity over its extrajudicial detention of ten Tibet supporters, the Chinese government is seeking to suppress a story that would have cast a shadow over the closing ceremony of these Olympic Games, which includes a final propaganda push to legitimize China's rule in Tibet, with Tibetans singing and dancing along with other so-called "ethnic minorities," said Lhadon Tethong, Executive Director of Students for a Free Tibet.
The Beijing Olympics have become synonymous with overt Chinese government propaganda, heavy-handed security and intolerance of any form of protest or dissent. In the lead up to and during the Olympic Games, hundreds of Chinese have been placed under house arrest, have disappeared or suffer in re-education-through-labor camps since being swept up in an Olympics crackdown on human rights advocates and others Beijing considers 'undesirables.'
"Thousands of Tibetans remain missing or detained in China's ongoing crackdown against predominantly peaceful protests that began in Lhasa on March 10th and moved like a tidal wave across Tibet," said Tenzin Dorjee, Deputy Director of Students for a Free Tibet. "During the Olympics, Tibetans have seen a vast troop build-up throughout the entire Tibetan plateau that suggests Chinese authorities are preparing a new assault against defenseless Tibetans who risked everything this spring, taking to the streets to demand human rights and freedom."
Taiwanese-American tourist Wen Yan-King who was detained and interrogated in Kham, eastern Tibet the week before the Olympics, described the areas she visited as "a war zone."
In order to conceal its intensifying repression in Tibet, the Chinese government has completely sealed off most of the Tibetan plateau. Tibetans in Tibet and Tibet analysts fear an escalation of the Chinese government's clampdown in Tibet after the Olympic spotlight on China has moved on. Tibetans continue to live in a climate of surveillance, intimidation, acute fear, and a threat of violence from Chinese troops, paramilitary and police.
Students for a Free Tibet calls on the international community, and the International Olympic Committee in particular, to demand that the Chinese authorities immediately release all those people who have been unjustly detained for their political or religious views in China's crackdown before and during the Olympics.
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Notes for editors:
1) The four activists detained at 12:05am Beijing time on August 21, 2008 are:
-Jeremy Wells, 38, of New York, USA
-John Watterberg, 30, of New York, USA
-Florian Norbu Gyanatshang, 30, of Stuttgart, Germany
-Mandie McKeown, 41, of Bristol, United Kingdom
The four were swarmed at just past midnight by dozens of plainclothes police after a brief protest near the Bird's Nest stadium. McKeown acted as an observer while Gyanatshang displayed a Tibetan flag and Wells and Watterberg raised their fists in the air in a gesture modeled on the 1968 protest of Tommie Smith and John Carlos at the Mexico City games. The action took place early Thursday morning shortly after the men's 200-meter dash final at the Bird's Nest, the event at which Carlos and Smith held their historic protest. See http://freetibet2008.org/globalactions/tibetanflag/
2) The six Americans detained on August 19th are:
-James Powderly, 32, New York, USA
-Brian Conley, 28, Philadelphia, USA
-Jeffrey Rae, 28, New York, USA
-Jeffrey Goldin, 40, New York, USA
-Michael Liss, 35, New York, USA
-Tom Grant, 39, New York, USA
Powderly, a high-tech graffiti artist, was planning a pro-Tibet laser art exhibition in Beijing. The five others
Tibetans and supporters vow to continue fight against China’s injustice
Contact:
Chime Youngdung: +91 9418 069 179
Tenzin Choeying: +91 9816 368 335
24 August 2008
Dharamshala: On the final day of the Beijing Olympics, hundreds of Tibetans and supporters in Dharamshala joined protesters across the world to voice their opposition to China’s continuous violence against the Tibetans inside Tibet. Adhe Tapontsang (Ama Adhe), a former political prisoner who spent a total of 27 years in Chinese labor camps since her arrest in 1958, was the Chief Guest at the function before the protest. Rigzin Choenyi and Lhundup Sangmo, two of the famous Drapchi 14 who’ve spent 12 and 9 years respectively in Chinese prison gave their testimony to the gathering.
“We urge the international community, and especially members of the media, not to divert their attention from China after the Beijing Olympics, as the Chinese authorities are likely to intensify their hostility towards Tibetans post-Olympics” said Tenzin Choeying, National Director of Students for a Free Tibet - India. “Tibetans and supporters all over the world are deeply concerned about the thousands of Tibetans who have been arrested and ‘disappeared’ since March this year, and we request governments around the world to pressurize China to release all political prisoners,” he continued.
The Chinese authorities have tried to suppress all dissenting voices during the Olympic Games, but with protests in Beijing and around the world, Tibetans and their supporters have consistently and effectively challenged Beijing’s propaganda.
“Tibetans and supporters around the world have been able to undermine China’s attempt to gain global acceptance. With their harsh treatment of protesters and foreign media in Beijing, the Chinese authorities have shown their true face to the rest of the world.” said Chime Youngdung, President of National Democratic Party of Tibet. “The end of the Beijing Olympics has given rise to a much bigger movement for the Tibetan People. We will continue our fight against injustices towards Tibetans inside Tibet,” he continued.
The Tibetan People’s Uprising Movement aims to revive the spirit of the Tibetan national uprising of 1959, and by engaging in non-violent direct action, bring about an end to China’s illegal occupation of Tibet.