AFP
KANGDING,
China: Tibetan monks chant prayers at their monastery in the Kardze
Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in China's southwestern Sichuan province,
23 March 2008.
KATHMANDU—Chinese authorities in the southwestern province of Sichuan
have detained a Tibetan television journalist and searched his home and
belongings, sources in the region said.
Tibetan
sources in India said Rangjung, 26, was taken away by police on Sept.
11 just before midnight by officials from the Kardze [in Chinese,
Ganzi] Autonomous Tibetan Prefecture, which comprises Serthar [in
Chinese, Seda] county.
"His family members were not informed of
reasons for his detention but they suspect some political reasons," an
exiled Tibetan from Serthar county in India said.
"They took away his laptop that contained, according to Chinese officials, some political documents."
Tibetan source"
A monk in Serthar county confirmed that account.
"The arrest took place but I do not have the details. If you call in two days, I will have more details," the monk said.
Detention center
"After
he was taken away, officials came again and searched his house. They
took away his laptop that contained, according to Chinese officials,
some political documents. His wife and two children were left behind in
Serthar county," one source said.
Rangjung's family were
informed that he was being detained at the Kardze prefectural detention
center but were given no detailed information about his condition.
Repeated
calls by RFA's Tibetan and Mandarin service reporters to the Kardze
Public Security Bureau went unanswered during office hours this week.
An
employee who answered the phone at the Kardze liaison office in Chengdu
said she knew nothing of the case. "I have never heard this report,"
she said.
RSF statement
A graduate of Dartsedo
[Kangding] Normal College, Rangjung later became a reporter, and he has
published three books on the Himalayan region.
In a statement, Paris-based Reporters Without Borders voiced deep worry about Rangjung’s arrest.
"The
Chinese authorities must explain why this journalist and defender of
Tibetan culture has been arrested," Reporters Without Borders said.
"The case highlights the climate of fear prevailing in the Tibetan
regions, where many people have been arrested arbitrarily since the
events in March."
Rangjung has presented news in Tibetan for local television for several years.
Tibetan
singer and TV presenter Jamyang Kyi was arrested at her office at
state-owned Qinghai Television in Xining, in the western province of
Qinghai, in April. She was freed after a month, after paying bail.
Chinese campaign
The
Chinese authorities have launched a concerted "patriotic education"
campaign among Tibetans, aimed at diminishing support for the exiled
Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.
Beijing blames the
Dalai Lama for violence that erupted in Lhasa, capital of the Tibet
Autonomous Region, on March 14 following several days of peaceful
protests.
Beijing says that 22 people were killed in the
rioting, which began in Lhasa and spread rapidly to other Tibetan areas
of western China.
Tibetan sources say scores of people were
killed when Chinese paramilitary and police opened fire on crowds of
unarmed demonstrators.
Chinese authorities also blame the Dalai
Lama for fomenting a Tibetan independence movement. The Dalai Lama
rejects the accusation, saying he wants only autonomy and human rights
for Tibetans.
Original reporting in Tibetan by Pema Ngodup
and Chakmo Tso and in Mandarin by Qiao Long. Tibetan service director:
Jigme Ngapo. Mandarin service director: Jennifer Chou. Translated by
Karma Dorjee and Jia Yuan. Written for the Web in English by Luisetta
Mudie. Edited by Sarah Jackson-Han.