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‘Tibet Libre!’: Protesters March on the Eiffel TowerPosted on Mar 21, 2008
PARIS—France’s Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner may still be questioning whether French athletes should show up at this summer’s Olympic opening ceremony in Beijing, but a throng of pro-Tibet protesters in Paris on Friday clearly had their own answer. Some 300 people rallied for Tibet at the Trocadéro as tensions with China continued to build, hoisting signs reading “Boycott the Beijing Olympics” and “China Out of Tibet” before marching through heavily trafficked tourist zones near the Eiffel Tower. “Today’s rally is to fight against the oppression of Tibetans by the Chinese,” said one Vietnamese demonstrator, who preferred to remain anonymous. “China cannot do anything they want in Tibet. They need the support of foreign governments,” she said, stressing that the violent clashes in Lhasa and neighboring provinces don’t just represent a problem for Tibetans; rather, “it’s a global issue.” Friday’s march on the Eiffel Tower was organized by a group of Tibetans living in France, according to Jampal Chosang, representative for the Dalai Lama in Western Europe. Watching the demonstration from the sidelines, Chosang played down the significance of the potential Olympic boycott and called the Parisian protest “a normal thing,” noting that it was a local and spontaneous show of support. “We are not concerned about the Olympics,” he said. “It’s a side issue.” Instead, Chosang focused on how, as he put it, the Chinese are “killing innocent people.” Referring to the Internet, he said, “the Chinese show a one-sided account. ... They show only what Tibetans are doing, not what [the Chinese] are doing,” claiming that Chinese troops have “killed 99 protesters” since last week. Addressing reports that the Dalai Lama somehow instigated this recent spate of violence, the Vietnamese demonstrator, who came with a group of monks from France’s Khanh Anh Pagoda, insisted that the exiled Tibetan leader has endorsed a policy of nonviolence for many years. “Tibetans are against the Chinese, and sometimes they rise up. It’s normal, because they are oppressed,” she said as the gathered group began its march. Watch a slide show of the demonstration below:
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By LadyDoc2007, March 26 at 9:33 pm # Excellent article on what happenedWashington Post, today’s article “There was no more crowd to be part of. It looked like they were turning on everybody,” said Kenwood, 19, describing the scene to reporters last week when he arrived in Kathmandu, Nepal, after 10 days in the Tibetan capital. “It wasn’t about Tibet freedom anymore.” Hundreds of mostly young Tibetans broke up into roaming gangs and attacked Chinese passersby and vandalized shops, killing 19 people and injuring more than 600 over two days. During the riots, looters set fire to a clothing store, burning to death five young employees who were huddled on the second floor. Most police officers kept their distance while the center of Lhasa descended into chaos.
By you are a liar, March 25 at 5:45 am # Do you have facts to back your claimsMore than 50% of the native Tibetan population has disappeared in the last 25 yrs (1983 to 2008)???? If you want to make your point taken seriously, you need to stay with facts.
By bozhidar bob balkas, March 23 at 10:14 am # one could have expected that france also would condemn china for its ‘illegal’ and immoral invasion/annexation of tibet. however, the west led by us, nearly always condemns crimes of socialist empires but never or seldom crimes of the capitalistic/undemocratic empires such as israel, us, uk, italy, canada, australia, et al.
By getoverit, March 22 at 6:46 pm # Re: Re: Do you guys want to turnI am aware what the Indian people had to went through, and that does not contradict the facts that Tibetan people are treated better by the communist regime than other ethnics living in the same region. All you have to do is to visit the place, talk to ordinary Tibetan people. Most families have Chairman Mao’s portraits in their family room. The irony is that they believe he was the one brought what they have now. There are people not happy about the current situation where the Tibetan minorities do not have much to say in politics. Among them there are militant extremists, like any religious groups, and there are simply street thugs which exist in any race/ethnic groups.
By Chris Herz, March 22 at 3:00 pm # Lhasa 2008, Watts 1965An old departed friend once owned the Shell gas station at the corner of Watts Avenue and the Freeway in LA. During the great riot of 1965 he witnessed the Cal Nat’l Guard station an armored car in the intersection by his station. It fired the whole length of the avenue (over a mile) at anyone trying to cross the street with its quad .50’s. At the end of the day hair, teeth and eyeballs everywhere. The Chinese regime’s governor of Tibet was correct: All governments confront resistance/rebellion from below in just the same ways. Chris Herz
By Peace Lover, March 22 at 2:42 pm # How about Free French Polynesia - Re: FreeOr China might be willing to trade Tibet for French Polynesia.
By getoverit, March 22 at 8:38 am # Do you guys want to turn Tibet intoI don’t think any of you guys have been to Tibet personally, or you care what happens to Tibetan people. If you did, you could not have made those comments. I visited Tibet last May, and to my surprise, most Tibetan people living in huge stone mansion like houses built by governments. You could see these houses throughout entire region with their unique colored roofs. Other ethnic groups (China has more than 50 different “races") are not so thrilled about this, but they can’t do much to influence decisions made thousands miles away in Beijing. Much like the American Indians could operate casinos, Tibetan people enjoy many “rights” other ethnic groups do not. If you saw how many people participated in the riots, how it started (initially a march by the exiles in India to denounce Olympics), you can not help by notice the media’s bias in reporting. To the peace loving people of the world, if you cared about truth, peace, and justice, you should read history, and digg the truth. Don’t let the media and what it fed you blind you.
By John K. Fitzpatrick, March 22 at 4:10 am # Free Hawaiimaybe China will trade Tibet for Hawaii....
By Awam Khas, March 22 at 2:53 am # Re: Yeah, "libre' " - do whatever thouThe regret is China did not allow any journalist on ground zero. What happen at Lhasa is politically motivated. Dalailama denied involvement but members of his org are involved. Even Nancy Pelosi met his in this opportune time. I tend to believe the China authority from my ground zero experiences in many parts of China. Add Your Comment |
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