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China says
firearms found in Tibetan temple
BEIJING—Chinese forces found firearms hidden throughout a Tibetan temple
in an ethnic Tibetan area of southwestern China which has been the scene
of anti-Chinese riots in recent weeks, state television said.
And Chinese police detained five air passengers, possibly Tibetans,
whose “suspicious remarks” prompted the return of their flight half an
hour after take-off from the southern city of Shenzhen, a newspaper
reported.
Police, responding to what they said was a tip-off from the public,
found 30 firearms in the monastery in Aba prefecture of Sichuan province
last month, state television said in a report, a transcript of which was
posted on its Web site ( http://www.cctv.com ). “At the time these
firearms were scattered around, some were where the monks keep the
scriptures,” policeman Lan Bo told the program. “They were modified
semi-automatic weapons.”
Aba has seen confrontations between police and Tibetan protesters who,
along with Tibetans in Tibet proper, have been protesting against
China’s rule and calling for the return of the exiled Buddhist leader,
the Dalai Lama.
Protesters have also disrupted the global torch relay for the 2008
Beijing Olympics, but the torch passed through Tanzania’s commercial
capital of Dar Es Salaam peacefully on Sunday. The official People’s
Daily newspaper accused Western media of distorting protests against the
relay and playing up their scale. It also lashed out at the European
Parliament for failing to condemn the “Dalai clique,” which China
accuses of being behind March 14 riots in Lhasa in which it says 19
people were killed. Exiled Tibetans give a far higher death toll.
“People cannot help but ask: the European Parliament always brags about
human rights and freedom, so why does it turn a deaf ear to the serious
human rights abuse of attacks on and killings of innocent people in
Tibet?”
China’s ambassador to Ireland walked out on a speech on Saturday in
which Environment Minister John Gormley accused China of human rights
abuses in Tibet. And visiting Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf
opposed the West’s “superimposition” of democratic values and human
rights on China.
“We condemn any attempt by anyone to undermine the process of Olympic
preparations, especially the Olympic torch (relay),” Musharraf told the
China Daily. He ensured students and academics in Beijing the torch
would be safe when it reached Pakistan. “Tibet is an inalienable part of
China,” he said in a speech.
The temple in which state television said the weapons were found was
named by the program in Chinese as Geerdeng. In a recent visit to
western Gansu province, officials showed reporters a film including
weapons seized from demonstrators, including a few hunting rifles, many
Tibetan knives, and lassos. No demonstrators shown on the films were
armed.
China has tightened security of its airways ahead of the Olympics and
says it foiled a plot last month by Muslim Uighur separatists to blow up
a plane. The Southern Metropolis Daily said on Monday police detained
five passengers whose remarks prompted the return of their flight after
take-off in the southern boomtown of Shenzhen en route to Chengdu,
capital of Sichuan.
The five talked in a language “others could not understand,” the
newspaper said on its Web site (www.nddaily.com). A caption said police
were checking “several Tibetans who made the remarks.”
One of them smiled at a flight attendant and said to her “Read the news
tomorrow,” it quoted a witness as saying. “Perhaps it was this sentence
that caused alarm among the crew,” the witness was quoted as saying.
China has accused the Dalai Lama of orchestrating the violence in Tibet
and other Tibetan areas of the country. But the Dalai Lama has rejected
the accusations, speaking out against the use of violence, calling for
talks with China and backing the Beijing Olympics.
Chinese media has mentioned the Dalai Lama’s announced support for
Beijing holding the Olympics, but has then immediately condemned him for
being insincere.—Agencies
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