Students for a Free Tibet
For Immediate Release
November 21, 2011
Contact:
Tenzin Jigdal, Program Director – India, +91 9736 660 451
Tenzin Dorjee, Executive Director, +1 646-724-0748
Kate Woznow, Deputy Director, +1 917-601-0069
***Compilation of footage can be viewed here: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/6955112/Tawu%20Footage.mp4
High resolution footage can be downloaded here: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/6955112/Tawu%20Footage.dv
Rare Footage of Tibetan Nun’s Self-Immolation Smuggled out of Tibet
10,000 Tibetans converge in Tawu for funeral, Chinese Forces Seen Entering Monastery
Dharamsala/New York – The most comprehensive footage of protests in Tibet this year, including shocking images of Palden
Choetso, a 35-year-old nun from Geden Choeling Nunnery in Tawu, eastern Tibet, who died after lighting herself on fire on November 3, has been obtained from sources in Tibet. One video shows Palden Choetso standing upright as flames engulf her body. Additional footage shows Tibetans’ response to the self-immolation, including nuns protesting and chanting “Freedom to Tibet”; thousands of Tibetans at a candlelight vigil early on the morning of her funeral; and Chinese security forces converging on Nyitso Monastery. In the past eight months, 11 Tibetans have lit themselves on fire in an unprecedented wave of protest against China’s escalating clampdown in eastern Tibet.
“This footage confirms reports that 10,000 Tibetans gathered at Tawu’s Nyitso monastery in a mass outpouring of support and prayers for Palden Choetso. Her ultimate act of nonviolent protest galvanized the entire community to openly and publicly offer their respects and solidarity in spite of China’s military clampdown in the region,” said Tawu Lobsang Jinpa, a former political prisoner from Tawu who escaped to India last February. “In Tawu, the crackdown continues although many Chinese soldiers are patrolling the town in civilian clothes to stop the world from seeing these images. Surveillance cameras have been installed around the monastery to monitor the monks’ every move.”
“This is an extremely difficult time for Tibetans everywhere. This footage shows not only the desperation but also the determination of Tibetans to fight for their freedom at any cost. We fear the situation will continue to escalate and more Tibetan lives will be lost if the Chinese government does not lift its repressive measures and commit to a just and lasting resolution to this spiraling crisis in Tibet,” said Tenzin Dorjee, Executive Director of Students for a Free Tibet.
Tibetan sources report that following her self-immolation, Palden Choetso’s body was taken to Nyitso Monastery. Her funeral was held early in the morning on November 6th. Tawu town is located in Kardze prefecture of the Tibetan province of Kham (annexed by China into Sichuan and Yunnan provinces after 1965), an area long known for actively resisting Chinese rule. Following the widespread protests in Tibet in 2008, Chinese forces have been stationed in and around Tawu town.
“We urge world leaders to respond to the crisis in Tawu immediately with bold multilateral pressure on the Chinese government. The Tibetans in these videos have risked everything to have their voices heard. Their actions must be a wakeup call that China’s repression will only stop if the world intervenes now,” said Tenzin Jigdal, Program Director of Students for a Free Tibet India.
I wonder if you could help me get the word out about an effort to raise awareness of the role of the placement of borders as a root cause of conflict in the world. In order to encourage natural or sustainable borders, I have started a campaign ( http://www.indiegogo.com/Sustainable-Borders-Campaign )to build a website that will show current borders, historic borders, and what a world map might look like if there were sustainable borders. China is a good example: the borders in that region would be very different if people could choose how they wanted to group themselves, or borders were based on other natural factors like watersheds or ethnolinguistic groupings.
I find the sudden increase in self-immolations troubling. Even though the Dalai Lama himself has not condemned the act outright. But to what effect? Can any good come from such a outright rejection of the core tenants of Buddhist thought by for fitting ones own life in such a violent way? A speak to this effect in a recent blog post, http://coffeefueledphilosophy.blogspot.com/2012/01/year-passes.html .