Nine monks arrested for Tibet bombing: report

Sat Apr 12, 2008 2:49pm EDT
 
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By Simon Rabinovitch

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese police arrested nine Buddhist monks suspected of bombing a government building in Tibet, the official Xinhua news agency reported on Saturday.

China has accused Tibetan groups of planning suicide attacks following last month's riots and protests, but this appeared to be the first report of a bomb attack during the unrest.

President Hu Jintao said earlier on Saturday that the Dalai Lama was trying to "split the motherland" through violence -- an accusation the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader has repeatedly denied in the past.

Xinhua said the bombing of the government building occurred on March 23, but did not say whether it had caused any damage or deaths.

Nine monks from the Tongxia Monastery in Gyanbe Township in Tibet had confessed to the crime, Xinhua added.

"Cewang Yexe, one of the suspects, brought a homemade bomb with a motorcycle to the site and moved it into the office building with the help of others," it reported. "They detonated the bomb and ran away."

China announced earlier this month that police had seized guns, bullets and explosives in some Tibetan Buddhist monasteries. But violence reported until now had come during rioting, when protesters torched shops in Tibet's regional capital Lhasa and pelted security forces with stones.

The Dalai Lama has rejected claims that he orchestrated the deadly rioting in Lhasa and subsequent protests across Tibetan areas. He has spoken against the use of violence and asked China for talks about the problems in Tibet.

Chinese officials have said that groups campaigning for independence in Tibet have joined Muslim Uighurs fighting for an independent "East Turkestan" in Xinjiang, northwest China.

A mainland-backed paper in Hong Kong reported this week that Tibetan and Uighur forces were also collaborating with al Qaeda to target the Olympic Games in Beijing in August.

Human rights groups have said Beijing is using perceived terror threats, denied by exile Uighur and Tibetan groups, to justify tougher controls in these restive regions.

Also detained in the crackdown in Tibetan areas were some of the young monks who interrupted a state-sponsored media tour in western China this week to yell they had no human rights, the U.S.-based International Campaign for Tibet said on Saturday.

Although local officials and trip organizers made no attempt to break up the demonstration, reporters at the monastery saw security forces taking photos of the monks.

NATIONAL UNITY

President Hu depicted the Tibet troubles as a threat to Chinese unity in a meeting earlier on Saturday with visiting Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd. "Our conflict with the Dalai clique is not an ethnic problem, not a religious problem, nor a human rights problem," Hu said. "It is a problem of either preserving national unity or splitting the motherland."  Continued...

 
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