One hundred and sixty known cases of self-immolations by Tibetan youths, monks and nuns over recent years have been reported in recent years. On one hand, this spate of self-immolations reflects the ever-growing anger of ordinary Tibetans against their Chinese colonial masters, while on the other, a complete silence among world
governments reflects their indifference
On March 27, an 81-year-old Tibetan, named Tashi Phuntsok, popular by his shortened name ‘Taphun’, committed self-immolation in front of the local Chinese police station in the Ngaba town, world famous for its Kirti monastery. This was the 160th known case of self-immolation in recent years by Tibetan monks, nuns, youths and ordinary citizens who have consigned their bodies to fire just to express their resistance against occupation of their country Tibet by China.
China occupied Tibet in 1951 and since then the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) have perpetuated their vice-like control over Tibet and Tibetan people. Only a month before Taphun’s self-immolation in Eastern Tibet, Tsewang Norbu, a popular 25-year-old Tibetan singer, too had taken his own life. He committed self-immolation on February 27 in front of the historic Potala Palace in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet.
Demanding Dalai Lama’s Return To Tibet
According to details coming out of Tibet, both these self-immolators were shouting slogans in favour of a ‘Free Tibet’ and calling for the return of the Dalai Lama to Tibet as fire engulfed their bodies. In both cases, before crowds of passersby could gather there, watchful Chinese security agents of the Public Security Bureau (PSB), omnipresent in uniforms and plain clothes in every street of Tibet, pounced upon the self-immolators and whisked them away.
As has become a regular practice by the Chinese administrators of Tibet, a complete official silence about such events is maintained and movement of Tibetan people and information are strictly controlled to stop world media from getting any details. According to Radio Free Asia (RFA), an international broadcaster from Washington DC in the USA, the Chinese authorities refused to share any information on both these events. They even refused to confirm that these self-immolations had happened in Lhasa or Ngaba. However, as per the details, slowly filtering out of Tibet, RFA and the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) in Dharamsala in India told that entire Potala Square and the rest of Tibetan section of Lhasa city were effectively sealed by the police following Tswlang Norbu’s self-immolation. Since the Chinese Government had already banned entry of foreigners into Tibet due to the Winter Olympics and the Paralympic Winter Games, there was no foreign tourist present there who could have witnessed or filmed the incident. It was only about a fortnight later that the news of Norbu’s death was known to the outer world.
For those who have been closely following the Tibetan situation before and after the conclusion of Beijing Olympics-2008, these two incidents reflect how Chinese rulers of Tibet have left no scope of public expression of anger and opposition of Tibetan people against the Chinese rule in today’s Tibet. “This incident has proven once again that the grip of China’s security system over Tibet and the Tibetan people has reached such levels of ‘perfection’ that it has practically become impossible for ordinary Tibetan citizens in today’s Tibet even to express one’s anger or frustration against the Chinese rule”, says Lobsang Wangyal, a senior Tibetan journalist and former Chief Editor of TibetSun.
More Self-Immolations Than Reported
Since 2009 in most of the known 160 cases of self-immolations inside Tibet, the incidents ended up in the death of the victims. Almost all of them were youths, monks and nuns. According to Tibetan exile sources, the real number of self-immolations is much higher because many incidents of unsuccessful or semi-successful self-immolations still remain unknown to the outer world because of the strong Chinese control over flow of information between Tibet and the rest of world. One example is of a 26-year-old Tibetan man Shurmo, who had set himself on fire and died in September 2015 at the bus stop of his hometown Nagchu in the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR). But the news of this incident and his death could be confirmed only five and a half years later in January 2021. It was only then that traditional last Buddhist prayers and rites were organised by his relatives and admirers living in exile in India.
China’s Brutal Crackdown
The deadly COVID-19 is haunting the country where it originated or was manufactured surreptitiously in laboratories in Wuhan. While the world was gripped by Delta virus, China was by and large sitting pretty. Now, things have taken a drastic turn. This can be seen from the utter chaos and food scarcity that has brought the prosperous city of Shanghai to its knees. Stringent lockdown rules for 16 consecutive days have left residents struggling to access essentials. Residents of this mega Chinese city have been left in the lurch as they are almost out of food. The city is reeling under an acute food crisis as can be seen from the testimonies of residents who say that they “only eat one meal a day” and “don’t know how to live until May”, The HK Post reported. According to the report, the epidemic situation in Shanghai is still deteriorating, and the number of infected people is still high under the “zero lockdown” policy.
While COVID-19 cases continue to rise in Shanghai, a giant Convention Centre in Guangzhou has been converted into a quarantine hospital. In Guangzhou, familiar steps are being taken as China imposes another strict lockdown.
Residents numbering 18 million people have been instructed by the Chinese administration not to leave the city unless absolutely necessary. Consequently, all kindergartens, primary and middle schools, colleges and universities have temporarily suspended in-person classes. Setting alarm bells ringing further for people working in global logistics, COVID-19 cases are being detected in greater numbers at Shanghai’s giant port neighbour, Ningbo. Beijing has faced severe criticism for its zero-Covid policy, which has seen trucking capacity cut dramatically in and out of Shanghai during its 16-day lockdown, as well as warehouses and factories shuttering their doors. Fewer than 7 million of Shanghai’s 26 million citizens have been released from their home confinement. As cases continue to rise in the financial hub there is little chance of daily life returning to normal this month.
It is interesting to note that the latest case of self-immolation by Taphun had happened in the Kham province of Tibet which, according to Beijing, is not ‘Tibet’ as it had been assimilated in the Chinese Sichuan province after China occupied Tibet in 1951 and reorganised its geography in 1962. The sudden spurt in self-immolations started in 2009 after China concluded the 2008-Olympics and the security system of the Chinese Communist Party had started revising its strategy to contain Tibetan public resistance against their Chinese masters. At the time of pitching for the 2008-Olympics by China, there was an international uproar against the dismal Chinese human rights record within China and its colonies like Tibet, Xinjiang and South Mongolia. To assuage this anger among the human rights supporters, the IOC and certain Western Governments supporting China in its Olympic bid had assured that hosting of such a huge international sports event would help and encourage the Chinese Government to improve the human rights conditions in China.
According to Tibetan exile sources, the real number of self-immolations is much higher because many incidents of unsuccessful or semi-successful self-immolations still remain unknown to the outer world because of the strong Chinese control over flow of information between Tibet and the rest of world
Francois Carrard, the Executive Director of IOC, had strongly supported China’s pitching and had practically condemned the international champions of human rights when he said in July 2001, “Some people say, because of serious human rights issues, ‘We close the door and say no’? The other way is to bet on openness. Bet on the fact that in the coming seven years, openness, progress and development in many areas (of China) will be such that the situation will be improved.”
But in sharp contrast to what IOC had hoped, the Tibetan people stood up against the ever increasing controls and inhuman treatment by their Chinese masters. Between March 2008 and the beginning of Olympics in August same year, Tibet witnessed more than 125 massive public protests at more than 50 places across TAR and those areas of original Tibet which were usurped into adjoining Chinese provinces like Sichuan, Yunnan, Gansu and Qinghai. Throwing all its assurances to the IOC and the world community to the wind, China has only deepened its security grip and digital surveillance system over Tibet and Xinjiang further. So much so that with the help of millions of CCTV cameras and mobile phone tracers, supported by Artificial Intelligence tools, the PSB control rooms can predict any public gathering much in advance. The Chinese agents can physically overrun the trouble spot before someone can do anything which is unpalatable or unacceptable to the Chinese masters. This should explain why more than 160 Tibetan youths, monks and nuns had to take to a ‘single-wolf’ action like self-immolation to express the ever-growing anger in the heart of ordinary Tibetans against their colonial masters. On one hand, this spate of self-immolations reflects the ever-growing anger of ordinary Tibetans against their colonial Chinese master, while on the other a complete silence among world governments reflects their indifference.
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