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. 'Most wanted' list out as China ups pressure over Tibet

Chemi Dolkar waits for the start of a demonstration calling for an independent Tibet on March 18, 2008 in Chicago, Illinois. The protest follows recent outbreaks of violence in Tibet after Chinese security forces clashed with hundreds of Buddhist monks and others. About 1,000 protestors joined in the march which ended at the office of Chinese Consulate. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 22, 2008
China stepped up its pressure on Tibetan protesters on Friday, releasing photos of wanted suspects who were captured on film in the worst rioting against Chinese rule in Tibet in nearly 20 years.

But with security forces having been poured into Tibet and other Tibetan-populated areas of China, rights groups and activists warned of mass arrests and the possible torture of those taken into custody.

With China keen to put its best face forward ahead of the Olympic Games in Beijing in August, US House of Representatives speaker Nancy Pelosi had harsh words for China as she met the Dalai Lama in India.

"The situation in Tibet is a challenge to the conscience of the world," said Pelosi, who was greeted by thousands of flag-waving Tibetan exiles as she arrived for talks Friday with Tibet's exiled spiritual leader.

"What is happening, the world needs to know," she said.

Faced with international concern over its handling of the unrest that erupted last week against Chinese rule in Tibet, state media acknowledged for the first time that police had opened fire on protesters.

After days of official statements that no lethal force had been used to quash the unrest, which has left an unknown number dead, state news agency Xinhua reported late Thursday that four people had been shot and wounded.

It said police shot the four in southwestern Sichuan province in "self-defence."

Pro-Tibet groups poured scorn on the report.

"At this point any statement the Chinese government puts out has virtually no credibility," said Lhadon Tethong from Students for a Free Tibet, based in Dharamshala, India.

"We are seeing photographs, we have friends who have lost relatives. We categorically reject any of the (official Chinese) information."

China said early Saturday that 18 "innocent" civilians and one police officer were killed in the rioting in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, raising its official death toll from 13.

The victims, it said previously, were killed by Tibetan "mobs."

But the Tibetan exile government of the Dalai Lama based in Dharamshala said it has confirmed 99 people were killed in the Chinese crackdown.

The protests began last week to mark the anniversary of a 1959 uprising against Beijing's rule of the vast Himalayan region, amid widespread anger over what Tibetans say have been brutal and repressive policies.

China has responded with a massive clampdown on the affected areas, and on Friday released a most-wanted list of 19 people caught on film taking part in the Lhasa riots, amid warnings by activist groups of harsh reprisals.

The photos, which appeared on top websites such as yahoo.com and sina.com, were taken from grainy footage taken during the unrest.

The state-controlled Tibet Daily later said two of the 19 alleged perpetrators had already been taken into custody. It also provided a hotline number for information from the public on those still at large.

"Lhasa police authorities are going all out to arrest the main suspects," the newspaper said.

The unrest has come at a sensitive time for China's rulers, with the Beijing Olympics fewer than five months away, and they have made huge efforts to stop the world from getting an independent view of their crackdown.

China has sealed off Tibet from foreign reporters and tourists, while releasing images and television footage of violent Tibetans.

Authorities have also sought to stop the foreign press from travelling to areas in Sichuan, Gansu and Qinghai provinces where protests have broken out.

However, foreign journalists, as well as Tibetan exiles and activist groups, have reported a huge military build-up in Lhasa and the other hotspot areas in recent days.

On Thursday, the last foreign journalist known to be in Lhasa reported that thousands of soldiers were in the streets.

"We saw a big convoy of military vehicles with troops in the back," Georg Blume, a journalist with German newspaper Die Zeit, told AFP shortly after being expelled.

Chinese authorities said on Thursday that 24 people had been arrested and 183 had surrendered for their involvement in the Lhasa unrest, following a house-to-house sweep of the city.

Tibetan exiled and activist groups warned the Lhasa crackdown was being repeated throughout the other provinces, and that the number of Tibetans now in custody was likely more than 1,000.

China says the Dalai Lama is behind the unrest, an allegation he has repeatedly denied.

The challenge China faces in hosting a successful Olympics was underlined Friday when the US warned citizens going to the event to expect hotel rooms to be monitored and "accessed at any time without the occupant's consent."

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Chinese TV screens Tibet riot special amid foreign pressure
Beijing (AFP) March 20, 2008
China on Thursday broadcast a special report on the Tibet violence showing monks and other rioters marauding through Lhasa as it continued to push its claim that the Dalai Lama was behind the unrest.

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