|
China says will ‘unwaveringly’ protect territory
BEIJING—China on Monday denounced attacks on its embassies by
pro-Tibetan activists hours before a deadline for rioters in Lhasa to
turn themselves in and said it would do all in its power to protect its
territorial integrity. The announcement by the Foreign Ministry at a
hastily called news conference came as about 40 students staged a
sitdown protest at the Central University for Nationalities in Beijing,
marking the spread of pro-Tibetan demonstrations to the capital.
“The Chinese government will unwaveringly protect national sovereignty
and territorial integrity,” ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said,
calling on other countries to protect its diplomatic personnel. China
said on Monday it had shown great restraint in the face of violent
protests by Tibetans, which it said were orchestrated by followers of
the Dalai Lama seeking to wreck the Beijing Olympics in August.
But even as the governor of Tibet said no guns were used against
protesters in Lhasa, troops poured into neighboring areas to enforce
control as the regional capital counted down to a midnight deadline for
protesters to give up. “If the Tibetans in Lhasa take to the streets
again in large numbers and really challenge the Chinese authorities, I
think we’ll see a very harsh crackdown,” said Kenneth Lieberthal, a
political scientist at the University of Michigan.
The continued tensions ensured the violence of the past week in Tibet
would hang over the country no matter what the resolution, with foreign
protests, pleas for leniency and China’s crackdown weighing
uncomfortably on the build-up to the Games. The European Union condemned
the violence but said a boycott of the Olympics would not be the right
answer.
Russia said it hoped China would do what was necessary to curtail
“unlawful actions” in Tibet. A brief Russian Foreign Ministry statement
made no criticism of Beijing. Tibet governor Qiangba Puncog said the
protests were ignited by supporters of the exiled Dalai Lama. “This time
a tiny handful of separatists and lawless elements engaged in extreme
acts with the goal of generating even more publicity to wreck stability
during this crucial period of the Olympic Games — over 18 years of
hard-won stability,” he said.
There have been daily pro-Tibet protests around the world since last
Monday. On Sunday, French police used tear gas against around 500
demonstrators at the Chinese embassy in Paris, and there were incidents
at missions in New York and Australia. “We strongly condemn the violent
action of Tibet independence activists,” Liu said, denouncing attacks on
its missions abroad. Of the violence in Tibet, he said: “This shows the
international community the Dalai clique.”
The Dalai Lama has said he supports the Beijing Games and has outright
rejected the Chinese allegations about his role. He fled Tibet after a
failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959 and set up a
government-in-exile in Dharamsala, northern India. Beijing reviles him
as a separatist but he says he wants only real autonomy for the region,
which Communist troops entered in 1950. The last major rioting in Tibet
was in 1989.
An ethnic Tibetan in Sichuan’s Aba prefecture said fresh protests also
flared near two Tibetan schools on Monday, with hundreds of students
facing off against police and troops. About 40 students from a high
school for Tibetans in Maertang county, Aba, were beaten and arrested
for protesting, the Dharamsala-based Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and
Democracy later said. Repeated calls to the school went unanswered.
The resident, who asked not be identified, also said 18 people,
including Buddhist monks and students, were killed when troops opened
fire on Sunday. Earlier a policeman was burnt to death, he said. His
account could not be immediately verified. Another Tibetan said the area
was tense and few dared go out.
“There was talk that hundreds of nuns protested too, but when you’re
locked up at home, who can tell?” he said. He also said a dozen or more
people died in the violence on Sunday. Exiled representatives of Tibet
in Dharamsala on Sunday put the protest death toll at 80.
—Agencies
|