SFT Olympics Actions

Students for a Free Tibet has put together a great video of their nonviolent direct actions protesting the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Awesome recap of a tremendous global campaign – give it a look:

In the lead up to and during the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Students for a Free Tibet (SFT) carried out several creative, powerful, and ambitious actions at strategic locations in Beijing and around the world to show China’s current and future leaders that Tibet is an issue of global significance that must be resolved before China will truly be accepted and respected as a leader on the world stage. 

My action in Hong Kong is about 7:10 into the video.

They Write Letters

My friend Nima Taylor Binara gets a letter published in the Wall Street Journal:

Tony Blair Is Wrong In Approach to China

With due respect to Tony Blair (“We Can Help China Embrace the Future,” op-ed, Aug. 26), he wildly misses the mark when he suggests that because the Tibet issue relates to the “One China” policy, it is an “existential” threat to China’s modernization.

Frankly, it is insulting to the Chinese people to suggest that a modern China is incompatible with respect for minority rights or self-determination for colonized peoples. This paternalistic view dismisses the values of democratic pluralism and freedom that strengthen, not hinder, modern societies.

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd had it right when he said, in China, that true friends are not afraid to point out problems. If Mr. Blair genuinely wants to help China “embrace the future,” he could start by pointing out that in the 21st century, China’s ongoing, brutal colonization of Tibet is an unacceptable anachronism.

Nima Taylor Binara, Esq.
Board of Directors
Tibet Justice Center
Arlington, Va.

Well done, Nima.

What Happened in East Turkestan?

Before the start of the Olympics there was widespread attention to a bombing and attack in Kashgar, East Turkestan (Chinese: Xinjiang). The only reports of the bombing came from Chinese state media, which even then included contradictory and varying accounts of what had happened. No foreign media was reported from Kashgar on the attack and it took a number of days before independent journalists were even able to follow-up with coverage on the aftermath.

Today the New York Times has a long report on the Kashgar attack based on the testimony and photographs of three foreign tourists who witnessed the incident. Their account casts serious doubts on the official Chinese telling of the attack and even raise the possibility that the attack was, at least in part, staged by the Chinese military.

The friend said: “The first thing I remember seeing was that truck in the wall in the building across the street. I saw a pile of about 15 people. All their limbs were twisted every which way. There was a gentleman whose head was pressed against the pavement with a big puddle of blood.”

“I remember just thinking, ‘It’s surreal,’ ” he said. “I had this surreal feeling: What is really happening?”

The tourists said the scene turned even more bizarre.

One or two men dressed in green uniforms took out machetes and began hacking away at one or two other men dressed in the same type of uniforms on the ground.

“A lot of confusion came when two gentlemen, it looked like they were military officers — they were wearing military uniforms, too — and it looked like they were hitting other military people on the ground with machetes,” the friend said.

“That instantly confused us,” he said. “All three of us were wondering: ‘Why are they hitting other military people?’ ”

The photographer grabbed a camera for the first time and crouched down by the window. His first photograph has a digital time stamp of 8:04 a.m., and his last is at 8:07 a.m. The first frames are blurry, and the action is mostly obscured by a tree. But it is clear that there are several police officers surrounding one or more figures by the sidewalk.

The photographer said that there had been two men in green uniforms on their knees facing his hotel and their hands seemed to be bound behind their backs. Another uniformed man began hitting one of them with a machete, he said.

“The guy who was receiving the hack was covered in blood,” he said. “A lot of the policemen were covered in blood. Some were walking around on the street pretty aimlessly. Some were sitting on the curb, in shock I guess. Some were running around holding their necks.”

The friend recalled a slightly different version of the event. He said he had seen two uniformed men with machetes hacking away at two men lying on their backs. “I do kind of remember one of them moving,” he said. “He was definitely injured but still kind of trying to squirm around.”

The relative also saw something different. He said a man in a green uniform walked from the direction of the truck. “A policeman who wasn’t injured ran over and started hitting him with a machete,” the relative said. “He hit him a few times, then this guy started fighting him back.”

After being hit several times by the machete, the uniformed man fell down, and at least one other police officer came over to kick him, the relative said.

It became clear to the tourists that the men with machetes were almost certainly paramilitary officers, and not insurgents, because they mingled freely with other officers on the scene.

While all this was happening, the three tourists said, a small bang came from the truck. It sounded like a car backfiring, the friend said. Black smoke billowed from the front of the truck.

The machete attack lasted a minute or two, the tourists said. One uniformed man then handed his machete to another uniformed man who had a machete, the friend said. One of the photographs shows a man walking around clutching two machetes in one hand. Another photograph shows a uniformed man carrying a rifle with a bayonet, a rare weapon in China. [Emphasis added]

At minimum, the accounts of these tourists and the photos they produced contradict the official Chinese story of a two Uighur separatists running an intense attack with bombs and machetes following the truck crash. The details on all sides are contradictory, but it seems clear that the government line is not what happened.

What did the official line achieve, though? The story of a highly effective attack by Uighur separatists days before the start of the Beijing Olympics generated strong sympathy for China in international circles. It also gave a degree of leeway to the Chinese for their intense military crackdown that was ongoing before and during the Olympics. Coverage of East Turkestan during the Games justified the intense security presence in large part on this attack, though other attacks took place in the same time period, which the Chinese government credited to the East Turkestan Independence Movement — a previously unknown separatist group.

I don’t think it is overly cynical to say that today’s Times story makes a convincing case that the Chinese government exploited the story of this attack and bent it in such a way to increase the attack’s severity. If it even was an attack, which the witness testimony in the article belies. Moreover, because the Chinese government did not give foreign journalists access to material needed to independently confirm the details of the attack after happened, there was no independent confirmation of what state media reported. This speaks to the need for China to lift their restrictions on foreign press in East Turkestan, as well as in Tibet. When the only source of information is the Chinese government, the world is not able to know what is happening inside their occupied territories.

Symbol of Peace? You’re Doing It Wrong

The Olympics are meant to be a symbol of peace, or so we’re frequently told by Jacques Rogge of the International Olympic Committee. The Games are supposed to be a moment where the world comes together, focused on sport and not politics. I think it’s a pleasant fiction that the Olympics are not political, but it must be hard for even the most ardent believers in the peaceful symbolism of the Olympics when you have stories like this connected to the Olympic torch’s ascent of Mount Everest:

Nepalese soldiers and police guarding the slopes of Mount Everest are authorized to shoot to stop any protests during China’s Olympic torch run to the summit, an official said Sunday.

Chinese climbers plan to take the torch to the summit of Everest – the world’s highest peak on the border between Nepal and Tibet – in the first few days of May. During that time, other climbers will be banned from the mountain’s higher elevations.

Police and soldiers “have been given orders to stop any protest on the mountain using whatever means necessary, including use of weapons,” Nepal’s Home Ministry spokesman Modraj Dotel said, adding that the use of deadly force was authorized only as a last resort.

Giving security forces permission to shoot Olympic protesters is about as far as you can get from a symbol of peace.

I wonder if this is what they have in mind when it comes to protests that must be stopped through the “use of weapons”?

Tenzin Dorjee and other Tibetan independence activists protest the Olympic torch on Mount Everest in April, 2007.

I simply cannot understand why any government working alongside the Chinese and the IOC would think it is a good idea to authorize deadly force against those who would protest the Olympic torch. I wonder what Jacques Rogge has to say about Nepal’s willingness to shed blood to defend his flame.

Update:

Buckaroo Banzai at Tibet Will Be Free has more.

China’s Crackdown in Tibet Continues On

100 monks were arrested for protesting the detention of other monks.

As many as 100 Tibetans were arrested in northwest China on Thursday after they demonstrated against the earlier detention of monks from a nearby monastery, witnesses and a Tibetan human rights group said Friday.

Local residents reached by telephone on Friday said that the police beat and arrested people at an open-air market in Tongren, a town in Qinghai, a western province bordering Tibet, after they refused orders to leave.

The residents said the town was the scene of several disturbances in recent months, including an unauthorized gathering in February involving 300 monks who were dispersed by tear gas as they tried to make their way to a government building.

Few things more clearly exhibit the lack of freedom in Tibet than the phrase “unauthorized gathering.”

Coca-Cola & Tibet

Lhadon Tethong, executive director of Students for a Free Tibet, has a great quote in a New York Times piece today about the pressure Tibetan support groups are placing on Coca-Cola regarding their sponsorship of the Olympic Torch Relay.

“We’re not asking Coke to solve Tibet’s problems,” Lhadon Tethong, the director of an organizing group called Students for a Free Tibet, told Mr. Isdell at the shareholder meeting on Wednesday. “We’re not asking you to do anything else but tell the I.O.C. this is not the time for the torch to go to Tibet.”

Ms. Tethong added, “You have influence, and you know you have influence. Please don’t hide behind a spin.”

You can take action and tell Coke to oppose the torch going through Tibet.

Smell the Harmony

Well, I suppose you have to smell China’s “Harmonious” torch, because you couldn’t see the Olympic Torch Relay if you were in Delhi.

The Olympic torch made a strange and lonely procession through central Delhi on Thursday, with the event so overshadowed by fears of the anti-Chinese protests that marred its appearances in other cities that no members of the public were allowed close enough to witness it.

The 70-odd Indian athletes and celebrities who carried the torch down Delhi’s widest avenue were outnumbered by thousands of watchful members of India’s security forces, who managed to stamp out any pomp and excitement, transforming the occasion into a tense security operation.

The authorities cordoned off much of the heart of New Delhi for hours before the event, anxious to avoid the disruption that plagued earlier stages of the torch relay and concerned that protesters from India’s large Tibetan community would seize the opportunity to sabotage the occasion. [Emphasis added]

What a joke the Olympic Torch Relay has become.  The only solace that the International Olympic Committee and party elites of the Chinese government can take is that the Relay has become such a humiliating mockery of past Olympic festivities that it’s almost impossible to imagine a situation where the Games themselves are worse than the Relay itself. As much as I might revel in schadenfreude in similarly disastrous Beijing Olympics, I don’t think it’s possible to have a more shameful production of any event than this has been.  What a joke.

London Mayor Admits Olympic Mistake

Following in the footsteps of San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom’s hard stance against the Olympic torch relay going through Tibet – a welcome move that was akin to closing the barn door after the horses had escaped – London Mayor Ken Livingstone now says that he made a mistake by allowing Chinese armed security forces to roam the streets of London guarding the Olympic torch.

London’s mayor Ken Livingstone said on Tuesday it was a mistake to allow Chinese secret police officers to guard the Olympic torch when it was paraded through London earlier this month.

“It was wrong and should not have happened,” Livingstone told a BBC Radio London debate.

Livingstone was asked if he knew in advance that the Olympic torch guards were members of China’s military secret police and he said he did not.

“Had I known, I would have said it was unacceptable,” he said.

But Livingstone apparently didn’t know and thus an unacceptable act took place on the streets of London. Once again, the powers that be in the Western cities that hosted China’s torchwashing of Tibet are realizing too late that they should have handled things differently.

Paranoia Will Destroy Ya

The Chinese government’s paranoia is really reaching comic levels.

Just two days before the Olympic torch relay here, a paranoid Chinese delegation told the Indian authorities that it fears guerrilla-style assaults by militant Tibetans and sought foolproof security for the event.

A high-level Chinese team led by former ambassador Sun Yuxi, who has been specially sent to India by a nervous Beijing, met Delhi government officials on Tuesday to discuss security for Thursday’s torch relay ceremony.

“They are so fear stricken that all types of baseless apprehensions are doing the rounds in their minds. They fear that Tibetans may attack the torch relay from hot air balloons. They asked if Tibetans can open fire from rooftops too,” a senior government official told IANS.

“We assured the delegation that nothing untoward is going to happen Thursday and the entire ceremony will conclude smoothly. Elaborate security arrangements have been made,” said the official who did wish to be identified.

We told them that since India is a democracy, demonstrations are a routine affair,” the official said. “Nothing, however, is allowed beyond Jantar Mantar,” in the heart of the capital. [Emphasis added]

China threw a party in Athens, London, Paris, San Francisco, and Buenos Aires and no one liked it. Now they’re scared their party in India is going to be the worst thing imaginable. Hot air balloons?