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March16th 2008

Not good news ……………………….

Dalai Lama: China causing 'cultural


genocide'
• Story Highlights

• NEW: Dalai Lama accuses China of "cultural genocide" of Tibetans

• Live footage shows Chinese police searching door to door in Lhasa

• Tibetans in exile say 80 dead in protests; China says 10

(CNN) -- The Dalai Lama on Sunday called for an international probe of China's
treatment of Tibet, which he said is causing "cultural genocide" of his people.
The exiled spiritual leader of Tibet spoke at a news conference Sunday in Dharmsala,
India, two days after violent clashes between pro-autonomy demonstrators and Chinese
security forces in the Tibetan capital Lhasa.
A spokesman for the Tibetan exile government said it has confirmed at least 80 deaths in
Friday's violence and that protests were continuing outside the capital on Sunday, further
undermining China's hopes of a smooth run-up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
Tibet Watch, a group based in Daramsala, India, told CNN that 34 people have died in the
Nwaga County area of Sichuan province in western China.
The dead include women and children, the group said in an e-mail, adding they were
killed by Chinese police attempting to stop the protests.
Eight bodies were brought to the Nagaba Kirti monastery, the Tibetan Center for Human
Rights and Democracy in Dharamsala told CNN. Of the eight, two are the bodies of
monks, the center said.
Another protest took place in Machu County in northwestern China, the group said. It
was started by some Tibetan students distributing fliers.
They were later joined by monks and laypeople. During the demonstration, several shops
and a security headquarters were burned, Tibet Watch said. An estimated 2,000 Tibetans
were using firecrackers in the streets, the group said.
Rare live video broadcasts from Lhasa Sunday showed dozens of Chinese police
searching a section of the capital, near the palace where the Dalai Lama lived before
going into exile 49 years ago.
The Dalai Lama said China, as the world's most populous nation, deserves to host the
Olympics but it must look seriously at repairing its human rights record "in order to be a
good host."
He laughed at suggestions that the exile government was fueling the anti-Chinese
protests, saying it was the natural result of deep resentment caused by China's treatment
of Tibetans as second class citizens in their own land.
The Dalai Lama -- who fled his homeland 29 years ago after a failed uprising, said Tibet's
"ancient cultural heritage" is threatened with extinction by China.
He said the officials in the Chinese government's local administration in Tibet were "very,
very negative" toward the native Tibetans, which prevents development of a "harmonious
society."
Tibet, he said, is seeking autonomy necessary to safeguard its heritage.
"We are not seeking separation," he said. In fact, he said, Tibet can enjoy modernization
through its connection to China.
China was using force to gain stability and peace, but it would always be superficial, he
said.
True harmony and unity must come from the heart, the Dalai Lama said.
Although Chinese authorities are keeping a tight control over communications out of
Tibet in recent days, the world got a rare live glimpse Sunday inside the Tibetan capital
Lhasa.
Video provided live by CNN affiliate Hong Kong Cable showed armed Chinese police,
dressed in riot gear, searching door to door through the Tai Yan Dao section of Lhasa --
near the Potala Palace. Watch police conduct searches. »
There was no sign of violence between the police or residents.
CNN International's live rebroadcast of the video was not blacked out by the Chinese
government to viewers in that country. The government sometimes exercises its power to
censor CNN's broadcast of stories sensitive to China by interrupting the broadcast as it is
fed into the country.
The Hong Kong Cable camera appeared to be pointed out a window above the area being
patrolled.
A spokesman for the Tibetan government in exile told CNN Sunday it had confirmed
from "reliable sources" inside Tibet that at least 80 people were killed during protests
Friday in Lhasa. Many others were shot to death by police in other areas, but the numbers
have not been confirmed, an exile spokesman said.
The exile government said Chinese authorities had effectively imposed martial law,
although it has not been officially declared. Schools, shops and businesses have been
closed, it said.
Home telephones and cell phones have been cut off and the movement of people is
restricted in many parts of Tibet, it said.
"Monasteries have been completely sealed off by [the military] and remain under
extremely strict surveillance," the exiles said. "Monks are being followed even as they try
to move within the compounds of the monastery."
Still, there were protests going on outside the Tibetan capital, the exiles said.
More than 200 people protested in Nyangden -- near the Sera Monastery north of Lhasa
-- Sunday, the exiles said.
Police used tear gas against demonstrators who took to the streets of Kama Kusang, east
of Lhasa, on Sunday, they said.
The exile spokesman also said there were major protests at the Labrang Tashikyil
Monastery and at least four people were taken into custody by Chinese soldiers.
Xinhua, China's official news agency, quoted police in Tibet giving protesters a deadline
of midnight Monday "to stop their criminal activities and offering leniency to those who
surrender themselves."
"Those who surrender and provide information on other lawbreakers will be exempt from
punishment," Xinhua reported the police notice said.
Tibet is one of two provinces in China, along with Xinjiang, where the Chinese
government places restrictions on reporters' access. Government permission is required
for foreign media to enter Tibet and Xinjiang, and CNN has not received permission to go
in.

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