Just Earth News | @justearthnews | 30 Jan 2023, 05:06 am Print
Image Credit: Representational image from Wallpaper Cave
Lasha: Chinese authorities in Tibet have detained a Tibetan writer and former teacher for allegedly contacting exiles outside the country, media reports said on Saturday.
The writer, known only as Palgon, was arrested at his home in August 2022 and has been incommunicado ever since, reports Radio Free Asia.
“There is still no information on where he is being held at the moment,” a source inside Tibet told Radio Free Asia.
“His family members were also not informed or given proper reasons for his arrest other than Palgon’s contact with people in exile to offer prayers to His Holiness the Dalai Lama,” the source added, insisting on anonymity for security reasons.
Palgon is from the Golog Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture in China’s southeastern Qinghai province. He was an elementary school teacher in the prefecture’s Pema county, but he later resigned from his role and continued as an independent writer.
“Palgon usually is very active on social media platforms and audio chat groups where he writes and engages,” another source inside Tibet told RFA.
Over the last few months, RFA has reported on China’s arrests of monks, writers, young protestors, and other Tibetan figures in a wide-ranging crackdown. Those detained will often be held incommunicado for months before being sentenced.
Dawa Tsering, director of the India-based Tibet Policy Institute, told RFA that the arrest shows China’s attempts to block Tibetans from communicating with the outside world.
“The Chinese government does not want the international communities to know about the harsh policies that they have been implementing on Tibetans in terms of religion, culture, and language,” Tsering said.
- UN officials says UK’s newly passed ‘Safety in Rwanda’ bill is anything but safe
- Israel-Palestine war: UN rights office says mass graves in Gaza show victims' hands were tied
- Pakistan: UN experts express concern over lack of protection for minority girls from forced religious conversions, marriage
- Forty percent Pakistanis are currently living below the poverty line, says World Bank
- Hindu girl abducted in Pakistan, community members slam authority