Drepung Monastery in Lhasa, Tibet’s capital is currently under intense
restrictions following a crackdown order issued by the "Tibet
Autonomous Region" ("TAR") government authorities on monks
sitting on mass silent protest, according to confirmed information
received by the Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD).
Reportedly the situation is tense and the monastery under tight control by
the Chinese authorities.
Since the first week of October 2005, "work team" officials have
been conducting the "patriotic education" campaign in the
monastery. During the Campaign, on 23 November 2005, the monks were
ordered to sign a document denouncing the Dalai Lama as a
"separatist" and to pledge their loyalty to the Chinese
government by accepting "Tibet as a part of China". The monks
showed their disagreement to the official directive and refused to sign
the document. Among the monks, five showed strong reactions against the
document and the officials. They were immediately expelled from the
monastery and handed over to the Public Security Bureau (PSB) Detention
Centres in their respective places of origin.
Following the arrests, on 25 November 2005, more than four hundred monks
sat on a peaceful solidarity protest in the front courtyard of Drepung
Monastery. The protesters refused to abide by the authorities’ directives
to denounce the Dalai Lama and to accept "Tibet as a part of
China". They also called for the release of the five monk arrestees,
or on refusal to do so, demanded to also be expelled from the monastery.
Fearing that the protest might grow unmanageable, the "TAR"
government issued an order to crackdown on the protesters. A huge
contingent of officers from the Army, People’s Armed Police (PAP) and PSB
arrived at the monastery and quelled the protest. During the crackdown,
the resisting monks received severe beatings. The peaceful protest was
quickly quashed, and the monks were shoved back into their quarters.
After the crackdown, severe restrictions have been placed on the monastery
and nobody has been allowed to either enter or leave the premises since 25
November 2005. The officers maintain strict vigilance of the monastery and
the monks’ activities round the clock.
Apart from the five monks’ arrests, TCHRD fears that many more arrests
might have taken place during the crackdown or thereafter. TCHRD will
continue to monitor the situation.
There has been a paradigmatic shift of increasing religious repression in
Tibet in the recent months. Beijing authorities’ suspicion of an alleged
interlinks between Tibetan Buddhism and Tibetan nationalism is clearly
evidenced by official attempts to control religion through "patriotic
re-education" campaign and arrests, torture and imprisonment. Under
the "patriotic education" campaign in the various monasteries in
Tibet this year, arrests and expulsions of clergy have been reported
consistently. At least one death can be attributed to the Campaign. A
young Tibetan monk, Ngawang Jangchub, 28, died under mysterious
circumstances in Drepung Monastery in the first week of October 2005
following a "patriotic education" session.
The recent mass non-violent protest initiated by the monks of Drepung
Monastery in Lhasa perhaps might be one of the biggest in a decade despite
a climate of severe restrictions and repressions in the Chinese occupied
Tibet.
The recent crackdown on the monks’ peaceful protest took place days after
Beijing’s President, Hu Jintao, gave assurances of improving human rights
to President George W. Bush, during the latter’s visit to China from 19 to
21 November 2005. Such assurances now seem empty promises in the face of
severe restrictive measures imposed on one of the most reputed religious
centres in Tibet.
TCHRD requests Mr. Manfred Nowark, the United Nation’s Special Rapporteur
on Torture currently on mission in China and Tibet (from 21 November to 2
December 2005), to raise the cases of the five monks since they are likely
to be tortured in the PSB Detention Centres.
For related information, click the following links:
A young monk dies under mysterious circumstances following the
"patriotic education" campaign in Drepung monastery (8 November
2005)
China recommences "patriotic education" campaign in
Tibet’s monastic institutions (13 October 2005)