On 4$B7n(B1$BF|(B, $B8a8e(B3:28, rst0wxyz <rst0w...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> On Mar 31, 5:58 pm, bitter anko <kaz...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > On 3$B7n(B30$BF|(B, $B8a8e(B9:12, TuoLongDuong
<jismqu...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
> > > Obviously, the Chinese Commies -- the Blessed Party -- realize that
> > > the "LESSONS" of Tinanmen Square have been lost on China's
"citizens."
>
> > > So now the Dear Party feels it must kill, maim, and torture -- or
ALL
> > > THREE in many cases -- to produce an updated LESSON for the current
> > > generation.
>
> > > As for the "punishment" being meted out 24/7 to Tibetan monks and
> > > dissidents, as Al Jolson used to say, "You ain't seen nothin' yet!"
>
> > > In fact, if the Most Honorable Party has its way, the outside world
> > > will "see" and hear relatively LITTLE!
>
> > > BOYCOTT -- BOYCOTT is the only response.
>
> > > ----------------------------
> > > "Fresh Melee in Lhasa After Police Apparently Launch Security
Checks"
>
> > > By Jill Drew
> > > Wa****ngton Post Foreign Service
> > > Sunday, March 30, 2008; A12
>
> > > BEIJING, March 29 -- A melee erupted in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa
> > > on Saturday afternoon in the midst of hundreds of armed police who
> > > have been out in force since deadly rioting rocked the city two
weeks
> > > ago.
>
> > > The incident occurred as a 15-member delegation of foreign diplomats
> > > was leaving after a tightly scripted two-day tour arranged by the
> > > Chinese government to show that the city was back under control. The
> > > diplomats, including officials from the U.S., Japanese and
Australian
> > > embassies, apparently did not witness it.
>
> > > Although details were sketchy, re****ts indicated that armed police
> > > began massing shortly before 2 p.m. to check the identity papers of
> > > people in the area where the March 14 riot started, and Tibetans
began
> > > running away rather than risk arrest. Security forces surrounded
> > > residential areas near the Ramoche and Jokhang temples while several
> > > hundred Tibetans staged a rally, Radio Free Asia re****ted, citing
> > > unnamed witnesses in Lhasa.
>
> > > A Lhasa resident who spoke on condition of anonymity said a friend
of
> > > hers had been shopping at a government store in the area when
someone
> > > ran in about 2 p.m. saying another riot had begun. The store manager
> > > closed the shop doors, fearing a repeat of the chaos and violence of
> > > the March 14 riot, which left at least 19 people dead. But the
manager
> > > was forced to reopen the doors when shoppers and employees demanded
to
> > > leave. In the earlier riot, five employees huddling on the second
> > > floor of a clothing shop were burned alive when their store went up
in
> > > flames.
>
> > > The woman ran out to the street but could not get a taxi or bus to
> > > stop. "Everybody was in a panic," her friend said she told her.
>
> > > The cellphone signal in the area had apparently been cut off, so the
> > > woman ran for nearly an hour to reach her home. She told her friend
> > > that she did not see a protest and that the streets were empty.
>
> > > The Lhasa municipal police sent a text message to residents'
> > > cellphones Saturday evening telling them, "Currently the social
order
> > > in our city is nothing abnormal." The message said that the security
> > > department was carrying out identity checks and that the procedures
> > > "caused some frightened citizens whose identification [do***ents]
are
> > > not clear to run away," according to a translation provided by the
> > > International Campaign for Tibet. Citizens were also told not to
> > > listen to or spread "wild rumors." The same message was broadcast on
> > > the local evening news.
>
> > > Chinese officials in Lhasa and Beijing could not be reached for
> > > immediate comment. Tibetan groups outside China said they learned
> > > about the melee from their sources in Lhasa.
>
> > > "The incident certainly shows China has not succeeded in creating
> > > genuine stability," said Kate Saunders, spokeswoman for the
Wa****ngton-
> > > based International Campaign for Tibet. "The situation is still
> > > volatile."
>
> > > Matt Whitticase, a spokesman for the London-based Free Tibet
Campaign,
> > > said: "We understand that according to an eyewitness, it involved
> > > hundreds of Tibetans. It was very quickly put down because there was
a
> > > heavy police presence in the area. It was a peaceful protest."
>
> > > The government-in-exile of the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai
> > > Lama, issued a statement from its base in Dharmsala, India, calling
> > > the demonstration "massive." "Thousands joined into the protests
> > > within no time," it said. "These protests are happening after many
> > > days of intense suppression."
>
> > > Thousands of police poured into Lhasa after the March 14 rioting,
the
> > > worst outbreak of violence there in nearly two decades.
>
> > > The turmoil began March 10 when police broke up a protest led by
monks
> > > against Chinese rule in the remote Himalayan region. The monks were
> > > marking the anniversary of a failed 1959 uprising against Chinese
> > > communist rule, led by the Dalai Lama, who was forced to flee. A
> > > larger protest the following day was also put down by police, who
then
> > > confined the monks to their monasteries.
>
> > > The Chinese government blames the March 14 violence on forces allied
> > > with the Dalai Lama, who denies responsibility. The Chinese have
> > > condemned re****ts that they used excessive force against peaceful
> > > protesters, saying that the 19 deaths were caused by the rioters.
The
> > > government said Saturday that the families of those killed will each
> > > receive $28,500.
>
> > > Police have detained more than 414 people, and 289 turned themselves
> > > in for participating in the riot, according to Champa Phuntsok,
> > > chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region. Of those, 111 have been
> > > released, he told visiting diplomats Friday night, according to the
> > > official New China News Agency.
>
> > > Lhasa's public security bureau has also issued a most-wanted list of
> > > 53 suspects, posting their images on Web sites and on TV. Champa
> > > Phuntsok said six of the 53 had turned themselves in and four had
been
> > > arrested.
>
> > > After March 14, no foreign journalists were permitted to enter the
> > > region until the past week, when the Chinese government picked 26
> > > foreign and Chinese journalists to tour Lhasa. During one unscripted
> > > moment, about 30 monks, weeping and shouting, burst into a briefing
> > > room and told the journalists that the government was lying and that
> > > they had no religious freedoms in Tibet.
>
> > > The U.S. Embassy issued a statement about the foreign diplomats'
trip
> > > to Lhasa that made no mention of a new protest. "The trip was
heavily
> > > scheduled, and neither the U.S. nor other participants were able to
> > > deviate from the official itinerary," it read.
>
> > > The U.S. official who participated in the trip, whom the statement
did
> > > not name, urged the Chinese to allow journalists and diplomats free
> > > access to Lhasa and other Tibetan areas that have experienced
> > > protests. The statement called the trip a step in the right
direction.
>
> > > Meanwhile, police in neighboring Sichuan province re****ted Saturday
> > > that they had seized guns, explosives and knives at a monastery in
Aba
> > > county, the site of a violent March 16 protest , the New China News
> > > Agency re****ted. In the bedrooms of some monks, police re****tedly
> > > found "Tibet independence" banners and flags of the Tibetan
government-
> > > in-exile.
>
> > > [Researcher Liu Song Jie contributed to this re****t.]
>
> >
>http://www.wa****ngtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/29/AR200...
>
> > China is really nothing more than the USA, the ugliest filthy country
> > ever existed on this planet. They admit no human-rights. They will
> > butcher Tibetans just like the USA butchered the millions of the japs
> > indiscriminately.
>
> And the Native American Indians. Remember:
>
> "The only good Injun is a dead Injun."-
$B0zMQ%F%-%9%H$rI=<($7$J$$(B -
>
> - $B0zMQ%F%-%9%H$rI=<((B -
Yes, you are right.They subconsciously consider
"The only good Injun is a dead Injun"
"The only good jap is a dead jap"
"The only good nigger is a dead nigger"
"The only good sand-nigger is a dead sand-nigger"


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