Author Topic: Monk sentenced to 3 years, Another dissapeared  (Read 4798 times)

Ensapa

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Monk sentenced to 3 years, Another dissapeared
« on: July 22, 2012, 11:36:15 AM »
Hmm..I wonder if these monks are really CTA spies or are allied with the CTA to subvert information to the monasteries? I dont think China would simply arrest people without proof, if they did they would have done it in every monastery in Tibet. But if this news is true, then why would these people actually do something that will get them into trouble? Why would China arrest the monks in this monastery, but not elsewhere? Hmm.

Quote
Monk sentenced to 3 years, Another dissapeared
Phayul[Thursday, July 19, 2012 19:57]


Lodoe, 36, in an undated photo. (Photo/Kirti Monastery)
DHARAMSHALA, July 19: A Tibet monk, missing for the past eight months, was finally traced after he was produced in a Chinese court in eastern Tibet and sentenced to three years in prison on unknown charges.

Lodoe, a 36-year-old monk from the Kirti Monastery in the beleaguered Ngaba region of eastern Tibet was arrested on October 20 last year and had not been heard off since.

Dharamshala based rights group, Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy, in a release today cited sources as saying that family members and relatives of Lodoe were neither informed nor invited to witness the trial that had supposedly taken place prior to the sentencing early July by an Intermediate People's Court in Barkham.

In another instance of arbitrary arrest and disappearance, Lobsang Tsering, a 21-year-old monk of the Kirti Monastery was arrested on June 26 from his monastery by Public Security Bureau personnel from Ngaba Prefecture.

“Since his arrest, Lobsang's family and relatives have approached relevant security offices in the region enquiring about his whereabouts and condition but to no avail,” TCHRD said. “It is not known on what charges Lobsang Tsering was arrested and where he is being held and in what condition.”


Lobsang Tsering, 21, in an undated photo. (Photo/Kirti Monastery)
With over 2500 monks, the Kirti Monastery is one of the largest seats of learning inside Tibet.

Since Tapey, a Kirti monk set himself on fire demanding freedom in Tibet and the return of the Dalai Lama from exile in February 2009, more than 15 monks and former monks from the monastery have self-immolated.

The monastery remains under heavy military blockade with armed soldiers strictly controlling the movement of the monks. Hundreds of monks from the monastery have been disappeared, while many have been sentenced to lengthy jail terms on charges of “subversion”.

Writing on her blog, Woeser, the Beijing based Tibetan writer, last year noted that the monks in the monastery were divided into four groups and armed police and cadres supervised every single person.

“In fact, the word “supervise” is too moderate; they monitored them, talked to them insistently and forced them to obey. If someone did not obey, well, the outcome would be very simple, they would brutally start beating them and then make them disappear; as for where they would disappear to, whether to prison or some other inhuman world, we do not know, we only know that up to now, hundreds of monks have been arrested.”

sonamdhargey

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Re: Monk sentenced to 3 years, Another dissapeared
« Reply #1 on: July 22, 2012, 03:19:25 PM »
Obviously it is political control over a religion. Any government in the world who practices draconian ways to silence dissent by putting away and locking away whistleblowers. These high handed methods is to instill fear in those who opposed the government to prevent protest against them. These actions are not respected and should not continue. These actions only enforces more violence and disharmony amongst the people.

bambi

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Re: Monk sentenced to 3 years, Another dissapeared
« Reply #2 on: July 29, 2012, 01:28:08 PM »
It is a sad case to hear things like this happening in China. What is being done to prevent such cases from happening? Especially the self immolation cases. And the thing I feel about the Chinese government is that they are not doing anything to have peaceful relationships. It is always about politics and not the welfare of the people. Whether or not the monks are spies, it shouldn't be that way, making them disappear as and when they want or forcing them to obey to all their ways.