Tibetans detained at the time of a fatal shooting of a Tibetan nun on
the Tibet-Nepal border last September were beaten and held in detention
for periods ranging from several days to several months, according to
new information that has reached ICT. At least 25 Tibetans were taken
into custody by Chinese police on September 30, including at least ten
young children aged between eight and 15. According to one of the
Tibetans in the group, now in exile, the older teenagers and adults
were severely beaten,and some children who were not immediately
collected by their parents were detained for more than three months.
Contrary
to this first-hand account, official statements by the Chinese
authorities to concerned Western governments claimed that the children
were treated well and released immediately, and that opening fire on
the group of unarmed Tibetans crossing the Nangpa Pass en route into
exile was part of 'normal border management'. One official asserted
that the Tibetan children in the group had been sent to be trained by
the 'splittist' Dalai Lama, and then would be sent back to China to
carry out his instructions.
An earlier precedent to the Nangpa
Pass shooting of September 30 has also been confirmed with eyewitness
accounts of Chinese troops opening fire on another group of Tibetans
traveling into exile in mid-October, 2005. Two Tibetan women from the
group have said they were fired upon when they tried to cross the
border into exile in mid-October 2005, and then beaten and interrogated
when captured.
Tibetan children taken into custody during Nangpa shooting incident
A
group of international climbers and expedition staff observed and
photographed the Tibetan children in custody of the PAP on September 30
last year, when they were escorted through advance base camp of Mount
Cho Oyu, which overlooks the Nangpa Pass, one of the routes into exile.
The Tibetans were part of a larger group escaping into Nepal, and part
of this group was fired upon by the PAP, resulting in the death of
17-year old Tibetan nun Kelsang Namtso. Climbers described the children
as looking bewildered and scared (see report).
The
US and European Union governments raised concern for the welfare and
whereabouts of the children in custody, and criticized China for the
actions of the People's Armed Police (PAP) in opening fire on the
Tibetans. The US Ambassador in China, Clark Randt, delivered a demarche
(official complaint) to China in Beijing on October 12, 2006 while the
European Union delivered a demarche to China on human rights including
the Nangpa shooting on December 19.
According to one of the
Tibetans from the group, who is now in exile, following their capture
the group was taken by the PAP to a detention center in the Tibetan
town of Dingri, close to the border with Nepal. The young Tibetan said
that the older teenagers and adults in the group were beaten with
rubber batons and electric-shock prods. The approximately 13 children
in the group aged under 15 were not beaten but were interrogated. They
were asked whether they knew who the Dalai Lama is, why they escaped
from Tibet, and also questions about the identity of the guides who
were helping them to attempt the border crossing. After a few days, the
group was taken to another prison to the southwest of Shigatse
(Chinese: Xigaze), the so-called 'Snowland New Reception Center' (known
locally as 'Shigatse new prison'), which was opened in 2003
specifically to receive Tibetans caught attempting to escape to or
returning illegally from Nepal or India.1
During
their period in detention, the children were required to carry out
cleaning work, and were allowed to play outside the prison for an hour
at the weekend. The older Tibetans were assigned to construction work.
Parents
of children in the group were allowed to collect them upon payment of a
fine, although those who were not collected were held in detention for
several months. Fines ranged from 100 yuan ($12) for those held in
Dingri to at least 500 yuan ($60) for those being collected from
Shigatse. It is possible that some Tibetans from the group are still in
detention.
The Tibetans in the group fired upon were
representative of many Tibetans crossing the Nangpa Pass into Nepal; a
high percentage of monks and nuns, seeking a blessing from the Dalai
Lama and to practice their religion in monasteries and nunneries in
India, and a large number of children, sent by their parents to obtain
an education in schools run by the exile Tibetan government.
Second group fired upon while escaping into exile: new account
New
information has been obtained about the circumstances of the shooting
of a second group of Tibetans escaping into exile, a year before the
September 30 incident on the Nangpa Pass. In mid-October 2005, a group
of more than 20 Tibetans fleeing into exile suffered beatings and
interrogation after they were fired upon and then detained by soldiers
in Dingri county, en route to the border with Nepal.
According
to the new reports, a group of around 50 Tibetans had traveled by bus
towards the border from Lhasa, and then walked at night for several
days. As the group arrived near the Nangpa Pass, at around six in the
evening, they were spotted by PAP personnel at a distance who opened
fire. One of the group, who is now in exile, told ICT: "The Chinese
opened several rounds of gunfire on us. We thought they were just
trying to scare us by shooting in the air. But then we realized the
shooting was serious. Our group scattered and I have no idea about
where the others are, maybe they went back where we had come from, or
managed to escape. After continuous shooting for some time, many of us
stopped running away and 23 of us were arrested by the Chinese
soldiers." According to the same source, none of the Tibetans detained
were injured by the shooting.
The interviewee could not
recollect exactly how long the shooting lasted. She remembered that the
soldiers were wearing 'green uniforms' and that "one of them had a
pistol and the others had long arms" (the latter is likely to be a
reference to the long, narrow barrels of assault rifles). A monk from
the group who apparently managed to hide from the shooting was found
and detained a few days later. When he was taken into custody,
according to the same source, he could not walk properly due to an
injury sustained when he fell while trying to escape. Others from the
group of more than 50 Tibetans were captured later as they continued to
try to escape. Both Tibetans from the group said that they were shocked
by the shooting as they had never heard of it happening before. They
believed that it could possibly have been because of the large size of
the group making the escape attempt.
According to the same
sources, the group of Tibetans was handcuffed and taken into detention
where they remained for several months. The males in the group, mainly
monks, were particularly badly beaten by electric shock prods,
according to the same account. One of the Tibetan women from the group
said: "We were handcuffed one by one by the soldiers. I think there
were about 20 of them, and more came. They were all carrying machine
guns2
and walkie-talkies. Since the soldiers didn't bring enough [handcuffs],
they tied some of our friends with rope and then took all of us to a
place where they had parked their vehicles. We were loaded into the
vehicles and taken to the army camp. We saw our guide and other monks
later brought to the prison. When the soldiers were trying to catch us,
the monks had tried to escape. We could see bruises all over their
faces as a result of beatings when the soldiers caught up with them. We
did not know where our guide was taken after that. We could see the
view of the Nangpa Pass from the place where we were arrested."
The
Tibetans said that the women were badly beaten but not as much as the
men, who were hit with electric-shock prods: "female inmates were
mainly beaten with belts." Most of the group was held in detention for
four months - for just over 13 days in Dingri, and then for the
remaining period in Shigatse 'new' prison. One of the Tibetan women
said: "We were treated like criminals. We were described as supporters
of 'separatism'." She was fined 3000 yuan ($385) upon release.
ICT
has received many similar reports of maltreatment of Tibetans caught in
the border areas, mainly on the Nangpa Pass or near the Chinese-Nepal
Friendship Bridge border crossing. According to Tibetans detained at
the Shigatse prison for trying to leave Tibet without papers, there are
generally no judicial procedures prior to or during their detention.
Many are held for periods ranging from several days to three to six
months and are generally fined before release.
It is clear from
reports about Tibetans' experiences of escaping into exile that PAP
troops have instructions to apprehend Tibetans who are attempting to
cross the border, and this incident in October 2005 sets a precedent
for the shooting of Tibetan nun Kelsang Namtso on September 30.
According to Chinese criminal law, Tibetans who cross the border
illegally violate Article 322 and are subject to imprisonment for
"secretly crossing the national boundary."
Following the
shooting on the Nangpa Pass last September, the number of Tibetans
leaving Tibet for Nepal along this route appeared to decrease in the
winter months of 2006. According to sources in the area, more Tibetans
appeared to be traveling by alternative routes. One nun who escaped
into exile late in 2006 told ICT: "One friend told me that her parents
advised her not to run away if Chinese soldiers try to arrest you and
your group on the way into exile. Otherwise, they may open fire and may
kill you like the nun Kelsang Namtso."
Footnotes
1
The literal signage posted in front of the prison is 'Snowland New
Reception Center' (Tibetan: 'khangjong nelenkhang sarpa'). The name for
the reception center in Kathmandu and in Dharamsala, India, of the
Tibetan government in exile is 'Tibetan Refugee Reception Center'
(Tibetan: 'bhoeme kyabjol nelenkhang'). The prison is located to the
southwest of Shigatse, and was once used as housing and office
headquarters for a Chinese construction company. Soon after the
prison's opening in 2003, former inmates reported to ICT that there
were approximately 300 prisoners in detention, with nearly all of them
caught attempting to escape, or trying to enter Tibet again from Nepal
without papers.
2 Likely to be assault rifles, copies of AK-47s, with an automatic capacity
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