Exposing the truth behind China’s occupation of Tibet
China has brutally occupied my homeland for over 50 years but my people continue their courageous resistance. Follow this blog, as I share what I see, feel, and experience... leaving Beijing wide open.
Human Rights Watch slammed the IOC and China for the plan to take the Olympic torch to Tibet calling it “unconscionable and reckless” and saying “if Tibet is open to the torch, it must also be open to an international investigation, the media, and anyone who wishes to know what actually happened in March.”
***To understand why this nun’s photo is here please read to the end of this post.
The Chinese authorities took the Olympic torch into Tibet today. It was paraded through a town in Gyalthang, an Eastern Tibetan area of Kham now administered under China’s Yunnan province. According to a Reuters article, “Olympic torch arrives in Tibetan areas amid tight security,” local residents said thousands of troops were deployed in the area and monks at one monastery were not allowed to go out:
“Security around the flame was extremely tight, hinting at how nervous the authorities are with reports of unrest and arrests continuing in Tibetan parts of China three months after anti-Beijing demonstrations turned violent in Lhasa, prompting the government to flood troops into the region.
At a monastery on the outskirts of town, some Buddhist monks said they had been forbidden from leaving during the torch run, while others were made to attend a sutra reading session that lasted from 7 a.m. until 3 p.m. — right when the torch was passing.”» Read the rest of this entry «
It’s been two weeks since the earthquake struck Tibet and China and the suffering continues to grow in both places. An aftershock yesterday caused at least two deaths, landslides and tens of thousands of houses to collapse. Torrential rainstorms are expected in the coming days and still most of the five million people homeless don’t have proper shelter. And then there are the dams. China’s Water Ministry admitted today that 69 dams may burst. The bad news seems never-ending.
I guess my Chinese friends flagged the “IOC: No Torch in Tibet” video enough times because Youtube took it down after more than 3,000 views saying “content inappropriate.” The same thing happened to the very original TV video footage of the Chinese shooting Tibetans at Nangpa Pass near Mt. Everest after it was viewed over 100,000 times.
A lot of crazy stuff gets posted on Youtube and doesn’t get taken down because Youtube cannot monitor it all and nobody cares enough to complain. But when it comes to pro-Tibet videos there’s an army of people just waiting to “flag” anything and everything they possibly can in the hopes that Youtube will remove it.
Not to worry, we’ll post that video in 100 other places. It’ll be back soon and many more people will see it. That’s the beauty of the internet and free societies - you cannot block people from the truth.
The photos in this video are hard to look at. They are of Tibetans shot and killed inside Tibet over the past month. This is the reality of Chinese rule in Tibet and what Chinese authorities do to Tibetans who dare to protest. This is what we can expect if the IOC allows China to take the torch through Tibet in May and June. The IOC doesn’t seem to get it?! Maybe this video will help them see the reality.