http://www.phayul.com
January 17 2014

Hundreds of Tibetans demand abbot and 16 others' release

As the abbot of Jhapa monastery Khenpo Kartse and sixteen others remain in detention over 400 Tibetans including 60 monks of the monastery staged a silent sit-in-protest in front of the County detention center in Nangchen on Wednesday demanding the Tibetans’ release.

The protest was, however, called off after local Chinese authorities promised to give information on Khenpo Kartse and release nine monks within five days.

Khenpo Kartse was arrested by Chamdo Police from Chengdu where he had traveled with regard to a purchase of a new idol for his monastery on December 6 last year. On December 21, sixteen Tibetans including monks were detained for their involvement in a protest demanding his release.

Following the abbot’s arrest, hundreds of monks and lay people in Nangchen walked with placards and banners demanding the release of the abbot. "Please look at the anguish of students separated from their teacher," read a banner carried by the monks.

Khenpo Kartse was interrogated by police teams from Beijing, Sichuan, Qinghai and Nangchenon Dec. 31, 2013. In a letter sent through Nangchen police team, Khenpo has assured fellow monks of the monastic community and local Tibetan communities of Nangchen that he was healthy and that he was not subjected to any torture in detention.

The Amnesty International has also initiated a campaign for the release of 17 Tibetans including Khenpo Kartse. The global rights watchdog has appealed the international community to write to the Director of Tibet Autonomous Region Public Security Bureau appealing Chinese authorities to release Khenpo Kartse and the 16 Tibetans arrested in the aftermath of a protest march by local Tibetans seeking Kartse's release.

top