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Phuntsog Nyidrol, last of the 'Drapchi nuns', arrives in US

by Kate SaundersInternational Campaign for Tibet
March 15th, 2006

Phuntsog Nyidrol, a Tibetan nun who was imprisoned for 15 years after
peaceful protests in 1989, arrived in San Francisco this morning more than
two years after her release from Drapchi (Tibet Autonomous Region) prison,
Lhasa. Thirty-four year old Phuntsog Nyidrol, who has suffered from
ill-health following torture while in custody, was accompanied by a US
Embassy official on the flight and released into ICT's care on arrival.
She had an emotional reunion at the airport with her former cell-mate
Ngawang Sangdrol, who now lives in the US, as well as Mary-Beth Markey,
Executive Director of ICT.

Mary Beth Markey said: "Phuntsog Nyidrol and Sangdrol have been hugging,
holding hands and crying, overjoyed to be reunited. This release is
wonderful for Phuntsog and her former prison comrades. However it is
important to note that despite serious engagement between the US and China
over the years, there has been little or no progress on fundamental human
rights issues in Tibet. Tibetans like Phuntsog Nyidrol continue to suffer
torture and imprisonment simply for the peaceful expression of their
views."

The release to the US of Phuntsog Nyidrol appears to be a gesture in
advance of Chinese President Hu Jintao's Washington, DC summit with
President Bush on April 19-20. It also follows the fifth round of dialogue
between the Dalai Lama's representatives and Beijing, which concluded last
month.

Phuntsog Nyidrol, a former Mechungri nun from Lhasa who won the Reebok
Human Rights Award in 1995, is the last of a high-profile group of nuns
detained for acts of peaceful resistance over the past decade to be
released. She was arrested on October 14, 1989, for taking part in a
peaceful protest against Chinese rule, linked to the Dalai Lama receiving
the Nobel Peace Prize. She was subsequently sentenced to eight years'
imprisonment by the Lhasa Intermediate People's Court on November 25,
1989. In September 1993, she received a nine-year sentence extension after
she joined 13 other nuns, including Ngawang Sangdrol, in secretly
recording songs about their prison experience and hopes for Tibet's future
on a tape cassette that was smuggled out to the outside world. After a
one-year sentence reduction for good behavior in March 2001, the remainder
of her sentence was commuted on February 26, 2004, and she was released
from prison.

Since then, Phuntsog Nyidrol has been held at home in Lhasa under close
surveillance and denied a passport because her political rights have been
under restriction. Last August, a delegation from the US Commission for
International Religious Freedom was allowed to have a brief interview with
her in Lhasa, and reported: "[Phuntsog Nyidrol] remains under constant
surveillance, is restricted in her movements and associations, and has
debilitating health problems that cannot be addressed in her locality."
The US Commission said that the Chinese authorities had denied that she
was under surveillance.

Phuntsog Nyidrol's arrival in the US today follows a number of other early
releases of well-known political prisoners from Tibet and one from
Xinjiang (East Turkestan) in recent years, generally timed to coincide
with specific periods of US-China engagement involving criticisms of
Beijing's human rights record. Uyghur prisoner Rebiya Kadeer was released
to the US in March 2005 after serving six years of an eight year sentence,
soon before US Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice traveled to the PRC.
Ngawang Sangdrol's release to the US in March 2003 after serving 11 years
of a 21-year sentence came before a significant visit of the then Chinese
President Jiang Zemin to America.

Phuntsog Nyidrol, who was serving the longest sentence of female political
prisoners after Ngawang Sangdrol's 21 years, was released soon after the
US State Department released its annual human rights report that found
China guilty of 'serious human rights abuses' in Tibet, including
"execution without due process, torture, arbitrary arrest, detention
without public trial, and lengthy detention of Tibetans for peacefully
expressing their political or religious views." The report was thought to
lay the path for the US to table a critical resolution on China at the UN
Commission of Human Rights meeting in Geneva that year.

Ngawang Sangdrol, who shared a cell with Phuntsog Nyidrol for several
years, said today: "It is overwhelming to see Phuntsog Nyidrol again. In
prison, she was always so strong, we thought she could do anything, and
she had great self-confidence and courage. We had no chance to study in
prison, but she was so hard-working in the labor tasks assigned to her,
and very devoted in her Buddhist practice."