Excerpted from Canwest News Service:
Sharon Hom, executive director of Human Rights in China, said: "It appears that Tibetans may be nearing the end of their patience. The central government in China needs to recognize the failure of its current policy in Tibet and address the fundamental problems fueling the unrest: inequitable development, exclusion from meaningful political participation and lack of protections for the integrity of the Tibetan culture and religion."
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For more information on this issue:
- HRIC Campaign:
Incorporating Responsibility 2008 Take Action Campaign - HRIC Press Statement:
Chinese Authorities Target Lawyers Offering Legal Assistance to Tibetans - HRIC Press Statement:
Chinese Lawyers Offer Legal Help to Detained Tibetans - HRIC Press Advisory:
Ethnic Minorities Remain Marginalized, Tensions Rise - HRIC Press Statement:
Five-Year Sentence of Olympics Critic Not Human Rights Progress - China Rights Forum No. 1, 2008:
One Slogan, Many Meanings: Bring Tibet to the 2008 Games - HRIC Press Advisory:
Stop Crackdowns in Tibet, Start Dialogue - HRIC Press Advisory:
HRIC Launches 2008 Take Action Website and Calls on China to Release Shi Tao - China Rights Forum No. 4, 2007:
Decline of Potala Palace - Woeser discusses the history of the Tibetan palace and the way Chinese-led economic development has changed its face. - China Rights Forum No. 4, 2007:
The Real Situation in Pre-Olympics China - Teng Biao and Hu Jia give their views about the situation on the ground in the countdown to the Olympics. - China Rights Forum No. 3, 2007:
2008 and Beyond - Articles, interviews, resource list, and campaign information focusing on the 2008 Beijing Olympics. - China Rights Forum No. 3, 2007:
A Tibetan Activist’s Beijing Blog - Lhadon Tethong kept her readers informed of her efforts to meet IOC president Jacques Rogge in Beijing, and her brief detention as a result.