The Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy(TCHRD) has
received information from a reliable source that, Rinzin Wangyal
a.k.a Rinwang, 59, died in prison at the end of 2004. There has
been no official confirmation of Rinzin Wangyal's death. It has
been reported that his body was not handed over his family.
Rinzin was serving a life imprisonment term in Pawo Tramo Prison,
250 km east of Lhasa. According to the most recent information
received by TCHRD on 31 May 2004, his health condition was known
to have gravely deteriorated due to constant torture over the years
in prison.
Rinzin Wangyal was first arrested in 1966-67 for alleged
pro-independence underground movement while working as a labourer
in a cement factory. He spent 17 years in prison until his release
in 1982. It was reported that while in prison he was regularly
tortured and interrogated by the authorities in Drapchi prison.
He was rearrested by the Public Security Bureau (PSB) in August
1995 on charges of suspicion of being involved in a political
movement aimed at disrupting the 30th founding anniversary of the
Tibet Autonomous Region 'TAR' on September 1, 1995. He was again
sentenced to a 16-year prison term in October 1997 and while in
prison his sentence was increased to life imprisonment.
Rinzin Wangyal's sentence was extended because of protests by
prisoners in Drapchi prison during and after the visit of a United
Nations delegation. Some prisoners were reportedly beaten and put
in solitary confinement as a result of disturbances following the
visit of the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention to prison on
11 October 1997.
In the spring of 1996 Rinzin Wangyal was refused permission to see
his wife Sonam when she became seriously ill and was admitted to
the Lhasa People's Hospital. Sonam died later that year. During her
prolonged illness, the Public Security Bureau failed to respond to
several letters of appeal by Rinzin Wangyal and his wife's relatives
requesting for a last meeting between the couple.
Rinzin worked as a construction worker in the "Ngachen Lokhang"
electricity unit. As he was educated in both Tibetan and Chinese,
he was said to have been offered a job in the Geographical
Department. However, when the Chinese leader Liu Shao Qi lost
political power, there was a shift in the Chinese government's
policy in Tibet. As a result some Tibetans accused of holding
"wrong political views" were demoted at the 'Shuini Chang' cement
factory. Rinzin was among one of those demoted.
As per the TCHRD record, death of Tibetan prisoners in the Chinese
administered prisons and detention centers across Tibet have been
due to severe torture and brutality. In most cases, the cause of
death remains unaccounted for. TCHRD has documented death of 87
known political prisoners as a direct result of torture in Tibet
since 1987. All of these Tibetans died either in Chinese custody or
after release from the prisons in their very poor health conditions
due to torture. Reports indicate that denial of timely and effective
medical attention to the prisoners has been one of the main causes
of their deaths.
Torture is a regular feature in the People's Republic of China
(PRC) despite the ratification of the UN Convention Against Torture
and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment (CAT) in October
1988 and outlawed certain forms of torture in the revised Chinese
Criminal Procedure Law, which came into effect in 1997. Torture
is still used for the purpose of extracting confessions, defeating
Tibetan prisoners' nationalist spirit, intimidating prisoners and
causing humiliation and mental trauma that affect the prisoners
for the rest of their lives.
The Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy expresses serious
concern over China's treatment of (political) prisoners. The deaths
of more than 80 political prisoners as result of torture and ill
treatment inflicted by prison officials are alarming, requiring
serious investigation by independent bodies. Rinzin Wangyal's death
in prison has once again come as a wake-up call to the international
community to check China's indiscriminate use of torture.