Tibetan filmmaker freed from Chinese prison after serving six years for separatism
Swiss film production company announces release of Dhondup Wangchen, held in China for six years for his work on 2008 documentary detailing Tibetan dissatisfaction with Beijing's rule

Tibetan filmmaker Dhondup Wangchen, who made a 2008 documentary about Tibetan nomads expressing discontent over China’s rule, has been released from a Chinese prison after serving six years for separatism, his production company said.
Wangchen, 40, was freed on Thursday in the western city of Xining, capital of Qinghai province, Switzerland-based Filming for Tibet said in a statement on its website. It said he was then driven by police to his sister’s home about two hours away.
Wangchen was arrested in March 2008 and sentenced to six years in prison in late 2009 on charges of trying to split the country.
That followed his work on the 20-minute documentary Leaving Fear Behind, a collection of interviews with Tibetan nomads expressing disgruntlement about Chinese rule in Tibet, just ahead of the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Anti-government riots had broken out across Tibetan regions shortly before the Beijing games, leading to harsh punishments and a tightening of restrictions on dissent.
“Six years of injustice and painful counting the days ended today.”
Officers at the Qinghai Provincial Women’s Prison, where Wangchen served out the last 17 months of his sentence, hung up the phone on Friday when a researcher attempted to confirm Wangchen’s release.