On March 17, Tibetans staged a small protest in Beijing.
This is the first time a rally has been held in Beijing
since protesting against the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
broke out in Tibet last week.
Meanwhile, the CCP continues to blockade the Tibetan capital,
Lhasa. Military police and armored vehicles are littered
throughout Lhasa's streets. Authorities are searching every
house thereby creating a cold and oppressive atmosphere.
The Tibetans protest has already spread from Tibet to remote
areas in Tibet as well as neighboring Sichuan, Qinghai and
Gansu provinces.
More than 50 Tibetan students from the Central University
for Nationalities, the highest educational institution for
ethnic minorities in China, staged a sit-in on campus on
March 17. The protest to support Tibetans spread to China's
capital, Beijing. Witnesses say that the student protesters
lit candles and police were on the scene. Although no clashes
have broken out, the police have already begun a search
for the organizers of the protest.
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Students in many universities in Western China also staged
peaceful sit-ins to support Tibetans fight against the CCP's
violent regime. On March 16, in Lanzhou City, the capital
of Gansu Province, about 500 Tibetan students in Northwest
University for Nationalities held a sit-in at the campus
sports ground. They also posted pamphlets around the campus
describing the situation in Lhasa.
Tibetan students in Hezuo Teachers' College in Southern
Gansu also held a demonstration and fiercely collided with
the school's CCP committee. As of now, a large number of
military police are patrolling and monitoring Southwestern
University for Nationalities in Chengdu in fear of Tibetan
students taking action.
Spokesperson Whitticase of London based "Free Tibet
Campaign" stated that the CCP authorities have deployed
a massive number of troops across the entire western region
and have even sent paratroops into Tibet.
Sources have also said that the Military Region in Chengdu
City has been on high alert and is sending troops to Tibet.
Analysts suspect that based on the weaponry that is appearing
on Lhasa streets, the CCP has already dispatched crack troops
to suppress the protests.