Sunday, August 19, 2012

Two weeks now in Astana, Kazakhstan, and must say that I am impressed and surprised - just as modern as the US, and cleaner and safer. Beautiful, sometimes odd and quirky architecture - Astana has tripled in size over the past 20 years, and lots of new buildings, skyscrapers - its like Dubai meets Las Vegas meets Tomorrow Land, all in the steppes of Central Asia. Here are some photos taken from our ultra-roomy and modern fifth floor flat - Dev has his own bedroom!

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Update

Haven't touched this page in four months! I have been writing, but not blogging. Trying to complete my novel, the working title which is "Under Buddha's Eyes." Its about love, different cultures, revolution, Nepal, India, lust, death and ... who knows what else. Had a play of mine almost accepted for a new play festival at the Kitchen Dog Theatre in Dallas. And had some interest in my adaptation of "The Stranger" by Camus, for the stage. We'll see. Plus I've accepted an Assistant Professor position at new, English only university in Astana, Kazakhstan, with the administation staffed and run by University of Wisconsin Madison and University College London. Looking forward to this new adventure, where I'll be teaching Literature/Playwriting, and Critical Issues in the Humanities. This will be very interesting and exciting, and we're moving at the very beginning of August.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Some video also

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2012/feb/10/inside-tibet-heart-protest-video

More Death in Tibetan China - Chinese governments reacts by further surpressing Tibetans...

Here goes a couple of articles and videos on the worsening condition in Amdo and Sichuan - with the repressive nature of the Chinese government, travel restrictions for foreigners and journalists, and the huge military presence, one wonders how much worse it really is.



News
World news
China




Tibetan monk sets fire to himself in latest anti-China protest

Nineteen-year-old monk is second person to self-immolate in three days and the 23rd to do so in the last year


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Reuters in Beijing

guardian.co.uk, Monday 13 February 2012 11.06 EST
Article history



A Tibetan monk set fire to himself in south-west China on Monday, an overseas Tibetan rights group said, in the latest reported incident of anti-Chinese protest.

The Free Tibet group said the 19-year-old monk, Lobsang Gyatso, set fire to himself in Aba county, known as Ngaba in Tibetan, in Sichuan province.

"Chinese state security personnel extinguished the flames and forcibly removed him from the scene. Lobsang's whereabouts and wellbeing are unknown," the group said in an emailed statement.

Reuters was unable to reach government officials in Sichuan to request comment. The monk is the 23rd Tibetan to self-immolate in the last year. He is also the second Tibetan teenager to do so in the last three days in Aba.

China's Xinhua state news agency confirmed that a nun who set herself on fire on Saturday had died.

The self-immolations are a small but potentially destabilising challenge to China's regional policies, and the government has branded those who set themselves alight as terrorists.

Activists say China violently stamps out religious freedom and culture in Tibet, the mountainous region that has been under Chinese control since 1950.

China rejects criticism that it is eroding Tibetan culture and faith, saying its rule has ended serfdom and brought development to a backward region.

Protests by self-immolation have become more common in Tibet and in ethnic Tibetan regions of China and at least 15 Tibetans are believed to have died from their injuries. Exiled Tibetan leaders say they fear a crackdown in the region to coincide with the Tibetan new year on 22 February.

The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, has blamed the self-immolations on "cultural genocide" by the Chinese but he has not directly called for them to stop.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Tibet Justice Center on Tibet; Links to write to President O. and your Representatives

Board of Directors


Prof. Robert D. Sloane, Chair Nima R.T. Binara, Esq.
Dennis Cusack, Esq.
John Isom
Joshua Levenberg, Esq. Wangchuk Shakabpa, Esq. Yodon Thonden, Esq.




2138, Year of the Iron Rabbit
26 January 2012

Chinese Forces Fire on Unarmed Tibetans,
Escalating Crackdown in Eastern Tibet

TJC Joins Efforts to Intensify Multilateral Pressure on China as
Tibetans Continue to Self-Immolate for Freedom


Tibet Justice Center has joined 184 Tibet-advocacy NGOs around the world today to strongly condemn China's policies and continued crackdown in Tibet, which have provoked an unprecedented wave of self-immolations by Tibetan monks, nuns and laypeople. Each individual who has carried out the act of self-immolation has demanded freedom for Tibet and the return of the Dalai Lama.



Palden Choetso, a 35-year-old Buddhist nun who self-immolated on 3 November 2011, in Eastern Tibet.

TJC has learned that on 23 January Tibetans in Drango, Kardze, eastern Tibet, began demonstrating, possibly following the arrests of Tibetans suspected of distributing political leaflets in the area. Chinese security forces opened fire and used tear gas on large numbers of Tibetans, many of who are displaced farmers and nomads. Protestors carried Tibetans flags and shouted slogans for Tibetan freedom as they marched towards a government office. A Tibetan named Yonten is reported to have been killed and a number of others injured.

These events follow an incident in Ngaba, Eastern Tibet, on 14 January, when Chinese security forces severely beat two Tibetans and shot at least two others after layman Lobsang Jamyang self-immolated. Tibetans became distressed and angry after witnessing Chinese police beating Lobsang Jamyang; they began to protest and attempted to reclaim the dying man, but police beat and opened fire on some in the crowd. There have been unconfirmed reports that a woman was killed and, as in Drango, those injured are apparently not seeking medical help for fear of arrest.

To date there have been 17 self-immolations in Tibet since February 2009, and four since the start of 2012. At least 12 of these self-immolations have been fatal. One of these, 42-year old respected monk Lama Sopa who set light to himself and died on 8 January, left behind a tape-recording in which he paid his respects to those who had self-immolated before him. He said, “Tibet’s future as a glorious country depends on the efforts of these heroes and heroines and all of you united as one." He offered his life for the “well-being of Tibet’s six million people and especially of all high lamas, headed by His Holiness the Dalai Lama."



Since demonstrations began occurring across the Tibetan Plateau in 2008 much of the formerly independent nation has undergone repeated lock-down and been flooded with armed troops, virtually closed off from the world. Many monasteries have been all but shut down and Tibetans are routinely harassed by the authorities in the streets, in their workplaces and in their homes.

Tibetans across the Tibetan Plateau are now facing yet another cut-off from the outside world, beginning mid-February through March, according to reports. The ban encompasses two important events; the Tibetan New Year, from February 22-24 and the Tibetan national uprising day, which is commemorated on March 10. Three years ago, demonstrations on March 10, 2008 had led to the biggest ever pan-Tibet uprisings seen for decades.

Tibet Justice Center joins with Tibetans in Tibet and around the world to vehemently condemn China's use of force against unarmed Tibetan protestors. We urge China to cease all extralegal actions and policies that are contributing to unrest and self-immolations in Tibet, and to respond positively to the calls of Tibetans for freedom and the return of the Dalai Lama.

We further urge governments to vigorously pursue actions in appropriate international forums that will convince the government of the People’s Republic of China on the severity of the situation in Tibet and on the legitimate concerns of the inter-national community that Tibetans enjoy the rights and freedoms enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international covenants to which China is a party.


Whom to Contact
In the United States you can contact President Obama and Members of Congress. You can write to President Obama here – http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/submit-questions-and-comments – to members of the US Senate here – http://www.senate.gov/ (click at upper right to find your senator) – and to members of the US House of Representatives here – http://www.house.gov/ (at upper right, enter your zip code and click to find your representative).
You can contact your country's embassy in Beijing directly and ensure they are aware of these demands. Ask them to seek full and detailed information about casualties and obtain assurances that those needing medical attention receive it without fear of arrest.

For a list of embassies, see http://www.chinahighlights.com/embassy/embassy-in-china/beijing/.

Finally, you can all local government offices in the affected regions and tell them the world is watching their violent response to Tibetan protests. Contact information for offices in Ngaba, Golog and Drango (Luhuo) can be found at http://www.studentsforafreetibet.org/article.php?id=1235.




Suggested Text

Suggested Email Subject: Enough! It's Time to Condemn China's Use of Force Against Unarmed Tibetan Protesters

Dear Person's Name Here :

China continues to intensify its crackdown in Tibet, which has provoked an unprecedented wave of self-immolations by Tibetan monks, nuns and laypeople. Each individual who has carried out the act of self-immolation has demanded freedom for Tibet and the return of the Dalai Lama.

Person's Name Here , I urge you to condemn China's use of force against unarmed Tibetan protestors, and further urge that China cease all extralegal actions and policies that are contributing to unrest and self-immolations in Tibet, and to respond positively to the calls of Tibetans for freedom and the return of the Dalai Lama. Tibetans that have been detained should be released, and those injured be able to obtain medical help without fear of arrest.

Your Country’s Name Here must vigorously pursue actions in appropriate international forums that will focus the attention of the government of the People’s Republic of China on the severity of the situation in Tibet, and on the legitimate concerns of the international community that Tibetans enjoy the rights and freedoms enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international covenants to which China is a party.

Person's Name Here , please call on China to cease all actions and policies that are contributing to the tensions, unrest and self-immolations in Tibet; to allow peaceful protest and to respond positively to the calls of Tibetans for freedom and the return of the Dalai Lama. Finally, I urge you to send diplomats to affected Tibetan areas, and demand from China assurances that foreign journalists will be allowed unfettered access to the Tibet Autonomous Region (including during the closure of the TAR from late February to mid-March) and Tibetan areas of Sichuan, Qinghai, Gansu and Yunnan.

Sincerely,

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

US may be inching towards more concrete action on Tibetan isssues...

US 'concerned' over Tibetan self-immolations
AFP – 20 hrs ago....

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The United States said Monday it was "seriously concerned" over self-immolations by Tibetan monks, adding they represent deep frustration over curbs on religious freedom in China.

"We're seriously concerned by reports that three more Tibetans have self-immolated over the past few days," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said, adding Washington has consistently raised the issue with Beijing.

State media said a Tibetan monk died after setting himself on fire in Qinghai in northwest China, taking to 15 the number of people who have set themselves on fire in Tibetan areas in less than a year in apparent protest.

It was the first time the Tibetan-inhabited province has been hit by such a death. Most self-immolations have taken place in neighboring Sichuan province, in what rights groups say are protests against perceived religious repression.

"These actions clearly represent... enormous anger, enormous frustration with regard to the severe restrictions on human rights, including religious freedom, inside China," Nuland said, referring to the wave of self-immolations.

"And we have called the Chinese government policies counterproductive," she said.

The US have also "urged the Chinese government to have a productive dialogue, to loosen up in Tibet and allow journalists and diplomats and other observers to report accurately, and to respect the human rights of all of their citizens," she said.

The State Department issued a similar statement in October.

During a visit to Honolulu for an Asia-Pacific summit in November, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed alarm over the wave of self-immolations.

The Tibetan government-in-exile based in India says that it does not encourage self-immolations but understands the frustrations behind them.

Thousands of Tibetans in India have attended protests or prayers to criticize China's rule of the predominantly Buddhist region.

The Dalai Lama fled Tibet for safety in India in 1959. He met in July with US President Barack Obama, angering China.
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