The Phnom Penh Post

Tibet language advocate gets jail for ‘incitement’

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A TIBETAN who has campaigned to preserve his region’s ancestral language was jailed for five years in China on Tuesday for “inciting separatism” in a case Amnesty denounced as “beyond absurd”.

Tashi Wangchuk was featured in a New York Times documentar­y that followed him on a trip to Beijing, where he attempted to get Chinese state media and courts to address what he describes as the diminishin­g use of the Tibetan language.

A court in Yushu Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in the northweste­rn province of Qinghai sentenced him on Tuesday morning, his lawyer said.

Tashi had been detained in his home town of Yushu without access to his family since January 2016, not long after the New York Times published its story and documentar­y video about his activism.

“Tashi plans to appeal. I believe he committed no crime and we do not accept the verdict,” lawyer Liang Xiaojun said.

Tashi had pleaded not guilty at his trial in January.

But nearly every case that goes to trial in China – especially on sensitive state security issues – ends with a guilty verdict.

Liang said the short documentar­y was the main evidence used by the prosecutio­n.

In the video, Tashi complained of a “systematic slaughter of our culture”.

In the New York Times stories Tashi said he wants to use Chi- nese law to build his case and praised President Xi Jinping.

Beijing says it “peacefully liberated” Tibet in 1951 and insists it has brought developmen­t to a previously backward region.

But many Tibetans accuse it of exploiting the region’s natural resources and encouragin­g an influx of the majority Han ethnic group which critics say is diluting the native culture and Buddhist faith.

China’s Constituti­on protects free speech but critics say in reality there is little room for any opinions that challenge government policies.

Amnesty said the sentence was “a gross injustice”.

“He is being cruelly punished for peacefully drawing attention to the systematic erosion of Tibetan culture. To brand peaceful activism for Tibetan language as ‘inciting separatism’ is beyond absurd,” said Joshua Rosenzweig, its East Asia research director.

“The documentar­y underscore­s that Tashi Wangchuk was merely trying to express his opinions about education policy through entirely legitimate means,” Rosenzweig said.

The video ends with Tashi discussing the many Tibetans who have self-immolated in protest at China’s policies over the years, while adding what he would do if he is “locked up or they force me to say things against my will”.

“I will choose suicide,” he said.

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