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Tibetans mark somber New Year after unrest
Tue Feb 24, 2009 11:39pm EST
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By Ben Blanchard
TONGREN, China (Reuters) - Tibetans living near the birthplace of the Dalai Lama marked their traditional New Year on Wednesday in quiet defiance and mourning a year after the region erupted in deadly riots and protests against Chinese rule.
Next month also marks the 50th anniversary of the exile of the Dalai Lama, following a failed insurrection against China, and there is intense security across Tibet itself and many neighboring areas with many ethnic Tibetans.
Qinghai, an arid, mountainous province of China next to the Tibet Autonomous Region, is the early childhood home of the Dalai Lama, the Buddhist leader whom Beijing blames for inspiring the unrest that swept Tibetan areas last year, prompting a widespread security crackdown.
Tibet's regional capital, Lhasa, is still under intense security. Last year, protests led by monks gave way to anti-Chinese riots on March 14 that killed 19 people. The subsequent crackdown prompted overseas protests which disrupted the international leg of the Beijing Olympic torch relay.
Beijing is determined to use this year to argue that its spending, schools and religious policies have done far more for Tibetans than the Dalai Lama and his calls for full regional autonomy. He has repeatedly denied being a separatist or supporting violent unrest.
Liu Yunshan, head of the ruling Communist Party's propaganda department, said it was undeniable that government policies in Tibet "have created one miracle after another," Xinhua news agency reported.
At an exhibition on Tibet in Beijing on Tuesday, Liu said: "Only adhering to Communist Party leadership ... can build a united, prosperous, democratic and civilized Tibet."
But in Tongren, an overwhelmingly Tibetan part of Qinghai, locals said they would quietly show their unhappiness by marking their traditional New Year, or Losar, bereft of celebration.
"There is nothing to celebrate after what happened last year," said Zhihua, a Tibetan Buddhist lama, speaking in heavily accented Mandarin. Many Tibetans use just one name.
"There's nothing planned today," said another monk, Jigmye. "We're remembering the dead from last year. It's a Tibetan tradition."
QUIET AND REFLECTION
The date of the Tibetan New Year depending on the lunar cycle, and most Tibetans mark this year's from Wednesday.
In Tongren, a steady flow of locals walked to a monastery to make offerings and turn prayer wheels while chanting and clutching beads.
There were no displays of joy, but also none of public protest. A few firecrackers could be heard.
Inside the monastery there were several portraits of the Dalai Lama, a show of devotion unthinkable in more strictly controlled areas. Continued...
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