Tibet authorities said on Thursday they had arrested dozens
of people involved in a wave of anti-Chinese violence that
has swept the mountain region and prompted Beijing to pour
in troops to crush further unrest.
China's response to last week's violence -- which it says
was orchestrated by the exiled Dalai Lama -- has sparked
international criticism and has clouded preparations for
the Beijing Olympics which the hosts hope will be the country's
"coming-out party" as a world power.
The prosecutor's office in Tibet's capital, Lhasa, said
24 people faced charges of "endangering national security
as well as beating, smashing, looting, arson and other grave
crimes" in last Friday's riots, the Tibet Daily reported.
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They were the first arrests since rioting erupted across
the remote region. Some outside groups say hundreds of Tibetans
may have already been detained, and the China News Service
reported Lhasa has broadcast wanted pictures of more suspects.
"The facts of the crimes are clear and the evidence
is solid, and they should be severely punished," a
Lhasa deputy chief prosecutor, Xie Yanjun, said.
He echoed the Chinese government's accusation that it was
exiled Tibetan Buddhist leader, the Dalai Lama, and his
"Dalai clique" who had engineered the violence.
It is a sentiment that resonates with ordinary Chinese.
"I don't think they would do this without any manipulation
by the Dalai Lama or some other organization ... I don't
think Tibetan people want independence. Any normal Tibetans
would be happy to live under China's rule," said Zhang
Ming, 25, a Beijing office worker.
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