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Nepal: Nepal police break up Tibet
protests, 284 held
March 31, 2008 - (Reuters) Nepali police beat pro-Tibet protesters
with sticks in Kathmandu on Monday and detained more than 280 people
for demonstrating against China, police and officials said, hinting
at a bigger crackdown on protesters.
Hundreds of Tibetans split up into small groups and tried to storm
a Chinese consular office from different directions in the Nepali
capital.
In what has become a familiar sight in Kathmandu in recent weeks,
they waved signs and shouted slogans demanding independence for
their Himalayan homeland, only to face beatings and detention.
The government later said it might have to take sterner action to
ban such protests altogether, because of a commitment made to Beijing
to prevent anti-China activities on Nepalese soil.
"We may have to think to stop all these activities against
China," said Modraj Dotel, a spokesman for the Home Ministry.
"They talk against China. They raise anti-China slogans and
carry placards and banners against China."
Exiled Tibetans have been protesting regularly ever since a deadly
riot broke out in the Tibetan capital Lhasa on March 14 followed
by demonstrations in other Tibetan areas of China.
Many Tibetans are furious over the crackdown against protesters
in Tibet and resent China's decades-old rule of the Himalayan region.
The Lhasa riot broke out after days of protests centred on the anniversary
of the failed 1959 Tibetan uprising against Chinese rule.
In Kathmandu, police broke up the rallies, grabbed the protesters
by their arms or clothes and hauled them into iron-meshed vans or
trucks.
"We want full freedom for Tibet," 40-year-old Sonam Dolma
said. "Until then we will continue to protest and make the
world listen to our voice."
Police said at least 284 men and women had been detained and would
be freed later.
"They have been detained according to the government policy
of not allowing demonstrations against China," said Bibhutiraj
Pandey, a police officer from the scene.
More than 20,000 ethnic Tibetans live in Nepal.
Nepal, which gets development grants from the Chinese government,
accepts Tibet as part of China.
From:http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/SP322232.htm
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