i came across this disturbing news and thought that i'd share it with everyone. Though this is not directly related to Dorje Shugden, what is frightening is that Tibetan masters are being assassinated by Tibetans. If this is the case, then Tibetan Dorje Shugden practitioners and masters have every reason to be afraid of death threats which will be prevalent until the ban is lifted. We live in dangerous times and i hope that the reason for this murder will be revealed in time. i think that citing financial reasons are rather vague, personally.
Tarap Shetrup Akong: British Tibetan monk 'assassinated' in Chinahttp://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/tarap-shetrup-akong-british-tibetan-2352532By Andy Rudd 9 Oct 2013 08:01
Chinese police said three Tibetans confronted and killed the monk, his nephew and his driver
A Tibetan monk from Britain has reportedly been "assassinated" in China.
Police in Chengdu, south-west China, say three suspects are in custody after Tarap Shetrup Akong was stabbed to death in a financial dispute.
The UK Foreign Office said: "We can confirm the death of a British national in Chengdu, China, on 8 October.
"We are providing consular assistance to the family at this difficult time."
Chinese police said three Tibetans confronted and killed the monk, his nephew and his driver.
Akong Rinpoche - who was addressed as such because of his respected status in the Tibetan Buddhist community - co-founded the Kagyu Samye Ling Monastery in Eskdalemuir Langholm, in the Scottish Borders.
A statement on the monastery's website said: "I am very, very sorry to inform you all that tragically, my brother Choje Akong Rinpoche, my nephew and one monk who was travelling with them, were all assassinated in Trengdu today.
"Rinpoche's body has been taken to hospital where a post mortem will be carried out."
Police said the men were attacked after negotiations over a financial dispute.
Tarap Shetrup Akong co-founded the Samye Ling Monastery in 1967, making it the first Tibetan Buddhist centre to be established in the West.
He maintained political ties with Beijing and met Jia Qinglin, then chairman of China's top political advisory body, when he travelled to Britain in 2006 to explain Beijing's policies in Tibet, according to the official Xinhua News Agency.
"Though we have settled abroad for a long time, we are always concerned about the development of our motherland, in particular the development of Tibet," Tarap Shetrup Akong told Mr Jia, as reported by Xinhua.
Beijing's rule of Tibet has been turbulent. Tensions flared up last week as Chinese security forces fired into a crowd of Tibetan residents who were demanding the release of a fellow villager detained for protesting against orders to display the national flag.
Overseas rights groups say about 60 Tibetans were injured in the rare shooting, a sign that Beijing is tightening its control in the Himalayan region following a wave of self-immolations in protest of Beijing's rule.
Beijing has accused the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama of trying to split the region from China, and local Tibetans resent the government's strict limits on Buddhism and Tibetan culture.
China says it has made vast investments to boost the region's economy and improve quality of life for Tibetans, but many say Beijing's economic policies have mainly benefited Chinese migrants.