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China

Phuntso Wangye, Tibetan communist who urged reconciliation, dies at 91

Revolutionary leader had criticised Beijing's tough stance towards region

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Phuntso Wangye, shown here in 2006, wrote to president Hu Jintao requesting him to let the Dalai Lama return from exile. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

Phuntso Wangye
1922-2014

Phuntso Wangye, a veteran Tibetan Communist leader who became an outspoken critic of Beijing's hard-line policies towards the autonomous region, died yesterday morning after an extended illness. He was 91.

"He left this morning," Phuntso's son, Phunkham, told Reuters by phone. "Before his death, he was a Communist Party member. After his death, we have invited lamas to pray [for his him] according to traditional Tibetan culture."

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Phuntso, who was in a Beijing hospital since July, recently developed lung problems.

Born in 1922 in the Tibetan county of Batang, now part of Sichuan , Phuntso founded the Tibetan Communist Party and launched a series of guerrilla uprisings against Nationalist rule until joining forces with the Communist Party in 1949.

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He led People's Liberation Army troops into the remote mountain region in 1951 and served as a translator for Chinese leaders Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai during talks with the Dalai Lama in 1954.

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