China stepped up its pressure on Tibetan protesters on
Friday, releasing photos of wanted suspects who were captured
on film in the worst rioting against Chinese rule in Tibet
in nearly 20 years.
But with security forces having been poured into Tibet
and other Tibetan-populated areas of China, rights groups
and activists warned of mass arrests and the possible torture
of those taken into custody.
With China keen to put its best face forward ahead of the
Olympic Games in Beijing in August, US House of Representatives
speaker Nancy Pelosi had harsh words for China as she met
the Dalai Lama in India.
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"The situation in Tibet is a challenge to the conscience
of the world," said Pelosi, who was greeted by thousands
of flag-waving Tibetan exiles as she arrived for talks Friday
with Tibet' s exiled spiritual leader.
"What is happening, the world needs to know,"
she said.
Faced with international concern over its handling of the
unrest that erupted last week against Chinese rule in Tibet,
state media acknowledged for the first time that police
had opened fire on protesters.
After days of official statements that no lethal force
had been used to quash the unrest, which has left an unknown
number dead, state news agency Xinhua reported late Thursday
that four people had been shot and wounded.
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