TCHRD has received confirmed information from reliable
sources that Gyaltsen Dolkar, layname Dawa has been
released from Drapchi Prison on 21 March 2002. She
is currently at her home in Meldro Gungkar. Gyaltsen
Dolkar is a 31 year-old Garu nun from Meldro Gungkar
County, Lhasa City serving a 12 year-prison term. Her
expected date of release was 21 August 2002. TCHRD has
no additional information on the reasons behind her
release. Updates will follow upon further inquiries.
Gyaltsen is the third nun political prisoner to be released
prior to their due date including Ngawang Choekyi and
Tenzin Thupten. Unconfirmed reports indicate that Gyaltsen
was meant to visit a hospital in Lhasa for treatment but
has not done so. Former political prisoners have testified
to TCHRD that Gyaltsen Dolkar's health condition has
been precarious since an uprising in Drapchi Prison in
1998. TCHRD believes that Gyaltsen Dolkar may have been
released on medical parole. With only few months away from
her date of release, TCHRD is concerned that her current
health condition may be precarious although nothing is
confirmed to date.
On 21 August 1990, a group of 16 pro-independence
demonstrators, including seven nuns from Garu Nunnery eight
from Michungri Nunnery and one monk from Sera initiated a
demonstration disrupting a state-run opera festival. It was
the first day of the weeklong Shoton (Yogurt) festival. The
group shouted slogans protesting the Chinese settlers and
supporting the Dalai Lama. They were immediately arrested
and taken away by the PSB of Lhasa City.
Gyaltsen Dolkar was one of the Garu nuns who was
sentenced on 30 November 1990, for "counter-revolutionary'
activities. She was sentenced to four years in prison and
deprived of political rights for one year.
In June 1993, while still in prison, Gyaltsen and
13 other nuns recorded songs and messages to their
families and friends on a smuggled tape recorder. Each
nun dedicated a song or poem expressing their feelings
of hope and aspirations. When prison authorities
discovered this clandestine activity, the nuns faced
severe repercussions. On 8 October 1993, the nuns
had their sentences extended ranging from five to nine
years. Gyaltsen received an eight-year extension bringing
her current total sentence to 12 years.