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ChinaPolitics

Tibetan monk calls out for independence, sets himself on fire in western China to protest Beijing’s rule: report

Self-immolation was the first case of the year, according to Radio Free Asia

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Tibetan Buddhist monks take a break at a Buddhist laymen lodge in Kardze, where the latest self-immolation occurred. Photo: Reuters
Associated Press

A Tibetan Buddhist monk set himself on fire and died in a protest against Chinese rule, in the first such action of its kind this year, a US government-funded radio station said on Wednesday.

Kalsang Wangdu self-immolated on Monday afternoon near the Retsokha monastery in western Sichuan province’s traditionally Tibetan autonomous prefecture of Kardze, Radio Free Asia reported. It said the monk called out for Tibetan independence while he burned, then died on the way to a hospital in the provincial capital of Chengdu.

Tibetan exile sources say at least 114 monks and laypeople have self-immolated over the past five years, with most of them dying. Radio Free Asia puts the number of self-immolations at 144 since 2009.

READ MORE: Life without a Dalai Lama? Disbelief at spiritual leader’s suggestion

Information from the region, which is largely cut off from the rest of the province by security checkpoints, is extremely hard to obtain, and local officials are reportedly under orders to remain silent about self-immolations. An officer who answered the phone at Kardze police headquarters and gave his surname as Li said no such incident had been reported.

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“We are now in a period of preserving stability. If such a thing happens, we will make it known to the public,” Li said.

Radio Free Asia and other groups also reported that a 16-year-old Tibetan living in India set himself on fire on Monday as a protest, but that he survived.

READ MORE: Dalai Lama travels to US for medical checkup

The protests are seen as an extreme expression of the anger and frustration felt by many Tibetans living under heavy-handed Chinese rule. Many protesters also call for the return of the Tibetans’ exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, who fled Tibet in 1959 amid an abortive uprising against Chinese forces who had occupied the Himalayan region a decade earlier.

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