Rev. Danny Fisher

Just a Buddhist Minister Trying to Benefit Beings

AP: China’s Communist Party Paper Calls for Efforts to "Resolutely Crush" Anti-Government Demonstrations by Tibetans

This from the Associated Press:

    The flagship newspaper of China’s ruling Communist Party called Saturday for efforts to “resolutely crush” anti-government demonstrations by Tibetans, while Beijing urged people to turn in those on a “Most Wanted” list of 21 protesters.

    [...]

    “We must see through the secessionist forces’ evil intentions, uphold the banner of maintaining social stability … and resolutely crush the ‘Tibet independence’ forces’ conspiracy,” the People’s Daily said in an editorial.

    “The people there are being subjected to mistreatment that is not acceptable with the conduct of a world power, which China is,” [U.S. Senator and Republican presidential hopeful John McCain (R-AZ)] said in response to a question by a Chinese reporter.

    “There must be respect for human rights, and I would hope that the Chinese are actively seeking a peaceful resolution to this situation that exists which harms not only the human rights of the people there but also the image of China in the world,” he said.

    The White House said Thursday the crackdown is not cause for President Bush to cancel his attendance at the Olympics. But it requested access to the region to see how Chinese police were dealing with detained protesters.

    On Friday, [U.S. House Speaker and Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)] lent her support to the Tibetan cause on a visit to the Dalai Lama at his headquarters in India, calling China’s crackdown “a challenge to the conscience of the world.”

    Pelosi, long a fierce critic of China, called for an international investigation and dismissed Beijing’s claim that the Dalai Lama was behind the fighting as making “no sense.” The Dalai Lama, who received the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, says he does not seek independence but wants genuine autonomy to protect Tibet’s unique Buddhist culture.

    Fighting back against the rising criticism, Beijing has begun releasing tallies of statements of support from foreign governments and trying to get its version of events before the international community.

    “It is a clear proof that the international community is on the side of China”, foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang said, according to Xinhua, which reported that 100 governments have endorsed China’s handling of the protests.

    Without mentioning Pelosi by name, Qin said China opposes “any encouragement and support for the secessionist schemes of the Dalai clique.”

    On Friday, authorities intensified a manhunt for people accused of violence, posting their photos–taken from video cameras and security footage–on major Internet portals.

    The 21 people are accused of endangering national security, and cited for beating, smashing, looting and arson. One suspect was shown wielding a long sword and another was a mustached man who had been shown on news programs slashing another with a foot-long blade.

    Xinhua said two of the 21 suspects were arrested and a third turned himself in. Authorities offered rewards for information and promised anonymity to tipsters.

    Police have arrested 24 people and another 183 turned themselves in, Xinhua said.

    Outside of Lhasa, Beijing has deployed troops across a wide swath of western China where more than half of China’s 5.4 million Tibetans live. Moving from town to town, police set up blockades and checkpoints to keep Tibetans in and journalists out.

    The mobilization was helping authorities reassert control after demonstrations flared in Sichuan, Qinghai and Gansu provinces, inspired by monks in Lhasa last week.

    In Lhasa on Friday, residents said police patrolled the streets, but people were free to go where they wanted as long as they had identity cards. In ethnic Tibetan areas of Sichuan and Gansu, residents said security forces set up armed encampments and hundreds of troops were patrolling towns.

    State television, in its first footage of the confrontation between protesters and police last Sunday in the Tibetan town of Aba, showed dozens of crimson-robed monks charging at a line of police standing behind plastic riot shields. Crowds of ordinary people hurled rocks and one threw a Molotov cocktail as cars burned in the town ringed by snow-peaked mountains.

    Xinhua said earlier that police opened fire on the crowd, wounding four and that protesters tried to break into the police armory to steal weapons. Tibet support groups say police killed at least eight and posted photos of bloody corpses on the Internet.

BBC: House Speak Nancy Pelosi Urges the World to Defend Tibet During Visit to Dharamsala

Via the Tibetan People’s Uprising Movement:

Washington Post: Olympics Sponsors "Scrutinized" After Crackdowns in Tibet and China

This from the Washington Post:

    Amid a widening crackdown in the remote Himalayan province, human rights organizations have renewed demands that Coca-Cola, Visa, General Electric and other international companies explain their dealings with the Communist government as it prepares to host the Summer Games.

    Many of those companies have invested millions of dollars in enterprises associated with the Olympics, traditionally a venue for both mass marketing and political protest. But China’s poor human rights record poses a special challenge for companies seeking to capitalize on a worldwide audience while maintaining reputations as good global citizens.

    Sponsors are talking privately to Olympics organizers, turning to PR companies for more help and meeting with each other in an effort to plot strategy, according to activists and advisers. No companies are considering pulling out yet, but many know that this is just the beginning of a concentrated push by a variety of interest groups.

    The companies are “at the table; they’re able to use quiet diplomacy to send messages of the importance of being responsible global citizens,” said one Beijing-based public relations adviser to sponsors, who spoke on condition of anonymity so he could speak freely.

    “In their interactions with the government, they would talk through issues and share some of the challenges,” the adviser said. “There are officials inside the government that are genuinely interested in understanding what the world thinks and how images and messages are communicated around the world.”

    [...]

    “The role of the sponsors in subsidizing this event, while monks are being shot, is not going to look very good,” said Sophie Richardson, the Asia advocacy director of Human Rights Watch. Major companies have the ability to “get the ear” of the Chinese leadership, she said.

    “What’s at stake is much more than the tens of millions of dollars these sponsors have bet on the Games. It’s their future business with China,” said Damien Ryan, a Hong Kong-based media relations adviser for Olympic sponsors. “Officials here read between the lines, and that’s why sponsors are thinking carefully about their response.”

    Dream for Darfur, an activist group, said it put out a statement to sponsors Monday, after the Tibet uprising, saying that public relations issues surrounding the Olympics had grown and that it was eager to discuss what action might be taken. While there was no immediate response, three companies later agreed to meet with the group Friday and two companies agreed to meet next week.

    “They’re concerned. I think they wish this would all go away,” said Jill Savitt, the group’s executive director.

    [...]

    “The Coca-Cola company is expressing deep concern for the situation on the ground in Tibet. We know that all parties involved hope for a peaceful resolution,” the company said in a statement.

    “While it would be an inappropriate role for sponsors to comment on the political situation of individual nations, as the longest standing sponsor of the Olympic movement, we firmly believe that the Olympics are a force for good.”

    Like Coca-Cola, South Korea’s Samsung Electronics is a sponsor of the torch relay, which will include a stop on Mount Everest. Activists say they plan to disrupt the relay in cities inside and outside China.

    “We just go with the flow,” said a Beijing-based spokesman for Samsung who identified himself only by his surname, Zou. “I believe the government can ensure the success of the Beijing Olympic Games. And I haven’t heard that any group will protest in Tibet or anything like this. We are not so concerned about this.”

    Some sponsors are reviewing their media strategies and considering scaling back the number of news conferences they will host, Ryan said. They are also likely to reduce the number of company spokesmen and shift focus to one-on-one interviews that they feel they can better control.

    [...]

    Meanwhile, the Associated Press reported that China has banned international broadcasters, including NBC, from taking live shots of Tiananmen Square, the site of a bloody 1989 crackdown on democracy protesters.

    Dream for Darfur, which has rated the sponsors of the Beijing Olympics and “failed” 13 of the 19 companies for their lack of response, said it was also leaning toward a boycott of the opening ceremony. It does not advocate a boycott of the Games.

    “That companies are responding and agreeing to meet with us shows they’re feeling more pressure,” Savitt said. “The activists with the Tibetan movement have lent an urgency. For those sponsors who wanted to engage by just talking, they now feel enormous pressure to take some action. But they are largely at a loss for what to do.”

Time Magazine: "A Monk’s Struggle"

(Click on the cover image to read the article.)

Charlie Rose: A Discussion about Tibet with Pico Iyer, Tashi Rabgey, Orville Schell and Robert Thurman

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