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  • Tibetan protests over Chinese occupation continue.

    A few protesters set fire to some government buildings and the Chinese responded by shooting into a crowd of people. I bet they shot innocent people instead of the arsonist.

    China confirms new Tibetan riots

    Monks were said to have rallied to free two arrested colleagues
    Renewed violence has broken out in a Tibetan area of western China, with reports of several injuries.

    Xinhua news agency said rioters attacked government offices in Garze, Sichuan province, on Thursday evening, leaving one official seriously hurt.

    Tibetan exile groups say security forces fired on crowds of civilians, killing at least eight people.

    The violence comes weeks after unrest swept through Tibetan areas and Beijing responded with a security crackdown.

    Protests were peaceful initially, but later turned violent and ethnic Chinese were targeted.

    Tibetan exile groups say Chinese security forces killed dozens of protesters. Beijing says about 19 people were killed in rioting.

    Foreign media organisations cannot report freely from Tibetan areas, so it is difficult to confirm facts from the area.

    'Warning shots'

    The latest Xinhua report states that a government official was "attacked and seriously wounded" in the Donggu township at about 2000 (1200 GMT) on Thursday.

    TIBET DIVIDE

    China says Tibet was always part of its territory
    Tibet enjoyed long periods of autonomy before 20th century
    1950: China launched a military assault
    Opposition to Chinese rule led to a bloody uprising in 1959
    Tibet's spiritual leader the Dalai Lama fled to India


    Q&A: Tibet and China
    Key events in Tibet unrest

    "Local officials exercised restraint during the riot and repeatedly told the rioters to abide by the law," Xinhua quoted an official with the prefectural government as saying.

    "Police were forced to fire warning shots and put down the violence," the official added.

    A UK-based activist group said eight people had been killed in the incident - including at least three women and one monk.

    Matt Whitticase of the Free Tibet Campaign said Tibetan exiles in India confirmed that monks had marched on government buildings after two of them were arrested for having pictures of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.

    More than 350 monks demanded their release and were joined by about 400 lay people, he said.

    Security forces opened fire after the demonstration had begun to disperse, he said.

    Chinese authorities have repeatedly blamed the Dalai Lama, who lives in exile in India, for stirring up unrest. The Nobel Peace Prize laureate denies the accusations.
    BBC, News, BBC News, news online, world, uk, international, foreign, british, online, service
    Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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      Tibetan religionists try to put out olympic flame



      LONDON, England (CNN) -- Protesters angry over China's human rights record and its recent actions in Tibet scuffled with police and made attempts to grab the Olympic torch and douse it with a fire extinguisher on Sunday.


      Reema Desai of Orlando, Florida, captured this image of the protests at the torch relay.

      1 of 4more photos » Hundreds of police officers guarded the 31-mile relay and flanked torch-bearers in an effort to limit disruptions by pro-Tibet campaigners. At least 35 people have been arrested for public disorder offences, the Metropolitan Police said.

      Crowds were lining the route across the city, many waving Tibetan flags and "Free Tibet" banners.

      Others carried signs reading: "Stop the killing in Tibet", "No Olympic torch in Tibet" and "China talk to Dalai Lama."

      China is hosting this year's Summer Olympics.

      Hundreds of pro-Beijing demonstrators were also gathered along the route and in Trafalgar Square with police separating them from anti-China protesters.

      Amid chaotic scenes, police officers grabbed a man in west London as he tried to snatch the flame from torchbearers.

      Moments afterwards, a second man released a cloud of foam from a fire extinguisher in an apparent attempt to douse the flame. Watch as protesters almost extinguish the Olympic torch »

      In a statement, the two men, Martin Wyness and Ashley Darby, said the relay was a propaganda campaign to cover China's "appalling human rights record," PA reported.

      "Our protest is not directed at the Chinese people whatsoever but instead at the brutal Chinese regime that rules them," they said.

      Three demonstrators were also arrested as they attempted to board a bus following the flame as Olympic gold medal-winning rower Steve Redgrave got the relay under way at Wembley Stadium, northwest London, The Associated Press reported.

      The relay, which featured many sports stars and celebrities, was also halted as it passed through Oxford Street in central London when human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell jumped into the road carrying a sign calling for the release of Chinese activist Hu Jia, who was jailed on Thursday.

      "The arrest last week of human rights activist Hu Jia shows that China is not fulfilling its human rights commitments which were part of the deal for them to get the Olympics," Tatchell told PA.

      "At the very least, world leaders should boycott the opening ceremony and athletes should wear Tibetan flags when they go on the podium to receive their medals."

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      Police commander Jo Kaye said there had been a "small number of criminal attempts to disrupt the safety, security and safe passage of the torch."

      "The Met has clearly stated in the build-up to this event that we will facilitate lawful protest, however we will not tolerate continued attempts to breach the safety security and safe passage of the torch and its bearers. Our officers will continue to respond swiftly and appropriately to any further incidents."

      The relay appeared to pass without major disruption outside the Chinese embassy despite the noisy presence of large crowds of protesters.

      China's ambassador to the UK, Fu Ying, carried the torch through Chinatown, following a different route to originally planned, before handing it over without incident, AP said.

      The rally also passed along Downing Street where UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown greeted the torch without holding it as it was carried by former British Olympic athlete Denise Lewis.

      Brown has resisted calls for a sporting boycott of the Summer Games. London is due to host the next edition of the Games in 2012.

      "It is also important to recognize, when you ask the question about the Olympic torch, that the Dalai Lama himself has said that he does not want to see a boycott of the Olympics," Brown said Saturday.

      Tessa Jowell, Britain's Olympics minister, called it "a demanding day for the police" and for the Beijing Organizing Committee, but also noted thousands had come out "to welcome the torch."

      Later, the torch was briefly transferred to a double-decker bus as around 100 pro-Tibet protesters attempted to surround the torchbearer near St. Paul's Cathedral.

      The relay resumed on foot over Tower Bridge despite continuing protests and progressed on its route through east London -- where many of the venues for the 2012 Games are being built -- before arriving at the O2 Dome in the southeast of the city. The relay is due to resume Monday in Paris.

      The torch's epic passage from Greece to Beijing has become a target for human rights campaigners opposed to China's hosting the Games, with further protests expected as the flame passes around the world before reaching the Chinese mainland next month when its scheduled route will take it through Tibet.

      "The Olympic torch should not be going through Tibet while Tibet is under occupation," protester Simon Cook said Sunday in London. "People are protesting for their freedom, they don't have the freedom to say anything. If they even say that they like the Dalai Lama they can be put in prison, they can be tortured, they can be shot."

      Chinese authorities have denied these kinds of allegations and have accused the Dalai Lama of instigating violence among his followers -- an allegation he rejects. The Dalai Lama has said he does not seek to separate Tibet from China, only to establish self-rule in Tibet, and that he opposes all violence.


      China's state-run Xinhua news agency reported that a Beijing Olympic official -- not named in the article -- criticized the protests "as an obvious act of defying the Olympic spirit." The official said the protest "is bound to fail."

      U.S. and other Western leaders have called on China's communist government to provide civil rights and freedoms to those in Tibet and to enter peaceful discussions aimed at resolving the crisis. E-mail to a friend
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