The Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD) has received
confirmed information from reliable sources that Lobsang Gyaltsen,
Loyak, Penkyi and an unnamed Tibetan were executed on Tuesday, 20
October 2009 under the supervision of the Lhasa Municipality
Intermediate People’s Court for their alleged involvement in last
year’s mass protest in the Tibetan capital. Further information is
awaited. No information on their execution was reported anywhere in the
Chinese state media.
According to sources, the dead body of Lobsang Gyaltsen, from
Lubug on the outskirt of Lhasa city, was handed over to his family and
his dead body was later known to have been immersed in Kyichu River.
There is no information on whether the defendants appealed
their sentences to the Supreme People’s Court after Lhasa Municipal
Intermediate People’s Court sentenced Lobsang Gyaltsen and Loyak to
death on 8 April 2009.
According to the Chinese official mouthpiece dated 8 April
2009, Lhasa Municipal Intermediate People’s Court sentenced two people
to death (Lobsang Gyaltsen and Loyak), two to suspended death penalties
(Tenzin Phuntsok and Kangtsuk) and another (Dawa Sangpo) to life
imprisonment on charges of arson causing death. The five were convicted
of torching five shops in Lhasa, killing seven people, during the March
14 riot.
On 21 April 2009 the same court, according to the State media,
sentenced three Tibetans (Penkyi of Nyemo County and Penkyi of Sakya
County and Chime of Namling County) to suspended death, life and 10
years’ imprisonment respectively for setting fires that allegedly
killed six people in Lhasa last year. The Centre is highly concerned
about the fate of Tibetans who were on suspended death sentences.
The PRC government currently sentences more people to death
each year than any other nation in the world. TCHRD condemns the
executions of four Tibetans and urges PRC government to show restraint
and to grant its citizens fair trials and to abide by the basic human
rights of all of its peoples, regardless of their ethnicity.
TCHRD remains unconditionally opposed to the use of the death
penalty in all cases as a violation of the fundamental right to life
and the right not to be subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment. It should also be noted that the death penalty
has never shown to have a special deterrent effect nor should state use
it to justify the wrong done by the defendant. For instance in the case
of two Tibetans (Lobsang Gyaltsen and Loyak) the state media earlier
reported that both "have to be executed to assuage the people's anger.”
Such eyeball for eyeball approach is in no way a justification of
giving death sentence. The execution of four Tibetans are further proof
of China’s unwillingness to abide by the United Nations Global
Moratorium on the Death Penalty, adopted in 2007, which establishes a
suspension on executions with the view to abolish the death penalty.
TCHRD expresses strongest condemnation and grief over the
shocking executions. The Centre also expresses serious concern over the
fate of other Tibetans with suspended death sentences. Toward this end,
the Centre seeks immediate and urgent intervention by the UN Special
Rapporteur on Extra Judicial, Summary, or Arbitrary Execution,
governments and the international community over this unlawful
execution.
|