Dozens of Tibetan prisoners were paraded on military trucks
in Lhasa yesterday, with their heads bent and wrists handcuffed
behind their backs, as soldiers from China’s People’s
Liberation Army tightened their grip on the Tibetan capital.
As a midnight deadline approached for rioters to surrender,
soldiers carried out house-to-house searches. Some of those
suspected of taking part in the mayhem last Friday, when Tibetan
anger at Chinese rule erupted into racial hatred with stabbing
and beating of ethnic Han Chinese and the burning of shops,
banks and businesses, had already been detained.
Four open army trucks carrying about 40 people, mostly young
Tibetan men and women, drove in a slow convoy along main roads,
witnesses said. Loudspeakers on the trucks broadcast calls
to anyone who had taken part in the riots to turn themselves
in. Those who gave themselves up might be treated leniently,
the rest would face severe punishment, the broadcasts said.
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The worst violence for 20 years in the deeply Buddhist Himalayan
region has drawn a tough response from the Chinese Government,
which is facing embarrassment as the riots threaten to tarnish
its image of unity and stability only five months before it
plays host to the Olympic Games.
Claims and counterclaims from Chinese officials and Tibetan
exiles over the number of casualties and a ban on foreign
journalists in Tibet have resulted in much confusion.
Champa Phuntsok, the ethnic Tibetan Governor of the Tibet
Autonomous Region, said the demonstrations had left 13 dead
and dozens wounded. Unconfirmed reports from Tibetan exile
groups put the death toll at 80 — a claim he denied.
He said: “This time a tiny handful of separatists and
lawless elements engaged in extreme acts with the goal of
generating even more publicity to wreck stability during this
crucial period of the Olympic Games.”
Speaking in Beijing, where he was attending the annual session
of China’s rubber-stamp parliament, the Governor made
clear that the response would be severe. “No country
would allow those offenders or criminals to escape the arm
of justice and China is no exception.”
The search for those involved began in earnest in Lhasa yesterday
as office workers trickled back to work after a weekend of
fear. Soldiers began house-to-house searches, checking all
identification papers, residents said. Anyone unable to show
an identity card and a household registration permitting residence
in Lhasa was being taken away.
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