Hi guest, Register | Login | Contact Us
Welcome to Phayul.com - Our News Your Views
Mon 06, Sep 2010 01:12 PM (IST) Tibetan Calendar Date
Search:     powered by Google
 MENU
Home
News
Photo News
Opinions
Statements &
Press Releases

Book Reviews
Movie Reviews
Interviews
Travels
Health
News Discussions
News Archives
Download photos from Tibet
 Latest Stories
Kochi Showers Love and Respect on Dalai Lama
Comic book on 14th Dalai Lama to be available in 10 languages
Decades after call for reform, Tibet remains in crisis
India concerned over China's Kashmir remarks
Shanghai Expo(sed): SFT launches "stop the attack on Tibetan culture"
India to discuss China with US later this month
Dalai Lama meets Tibetan students in Bylakuppe
Tibetan nomads struggle as grasslands disappear from the roof of the world
China tests its Sukhois at upgraded airfields in Tibet
China adamant on Kashmir as "disputed", says stapled visa will continue
 Latest Photo News
His Holiness the Dalai Lama arrives in McLeod Ganj after visits to Bylakuppe and Kochi. The Tibetan leader will give teachings on Heart Sutra (sherab nyingpo) & Gyalsey Thokme Sangpo's 37 Practices of A Bodhisattva (gyalsey laklen sodunma) at the request of a group of Southeast Asians from Sept 8- Sept 10. Phayul Photo Sept. 5, 2010
His Holiness the Dalai Lama arrives with South Korean Buddhist monk Jin Ok at the Tsugla
Khang temple in Mcleod Ganj, India, 28 August 2010. The Dalai Lama began a two-day teachings on "Diamond Sutra" (Dorje Chodpa) at the request Buddhists from
South Korea. Phayul Photo: Lobsang Wanggyal
Tibetan Prime Minister Samdhong Rinpoche (Center) leads a religious procession of His Holiness the Dalai Lama's portrait as part of the ceremonial opening of a six-day Tibetan National General Meeting in the Tibetan settlement of Bylakuppe in the South Indian state of Karnataka, India, Thursday, August 26, 2010.  Also seen in the picture are Tibetan Parliament Speaker Mr Penpa Tsering (L) and Deputy Speaker Gyari Dolma (R). Over 300 Tibetan delegates from across the world are taking part in a rare pivotal meeting, first one after two years, to focus on various issues like political affairs, promotion of democracy, advocacy for Tibetan issue, sustenance of the settlement,  education, health, economy, religion and culture. Over 30 parliament members from 14 different countries, legislators from Karnataka and local dignitaries are also expected to attend the event in closing days of the event. (Photo: Zarang Passay)
more photos »
Advertisement
School founder's sentence reduced: Bangri Rinpoche transferred to new prison
ICT[Thursday, March 09, 2006 12:23]
Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche (also known as Jigme Tenzin Nyima), the founder and head-teacher of a children's school in Lhasa that was closed down by the authorities in 1999, has had his life sentence commuted to fixed term and reduced by one year, according to new information obtained by John Kamm's Dui Hua Foundation.

Forty-year old Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche, who was sentenced on charges of 'attempting to split the country' in 2000, has been transferred from Drapchi prison to the new prison of Chushur (Chinese: Qushui) county near Nyethang (Chinese: Nidang) of Lhasa, where the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, Manfred Nowak, met him during his visit to the PRC from November 20 to December 2 last year (see article at http://www.savetibet.org/news/newsitem.php?id=896). Mr Nowak also visited Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche's wife, Nyima Choedron, in Drapchi prison (Tibet Autonomous Region prison). Nyima's ten year sentence for 'splittism' has been reduced twice and ends on February 26, 2007.

The imprisonment of Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche (Chinese: Jinmei Danzeng Nima) and his partner Nyima Choedron, a 37-year old former nun, was linked by the Chinese authorities to an attempt by a Tibetan construction worker at the school to raise the Tibetan flag in the main square in Lhasa and to blow himself up with explosives. Gyatso, the school and home for children managed by Bangri Chogtrul and Nyima and supported by at least two charities and individual donors from the US and UK, was closed and other staff arrested and imprisoned after the same incident. Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche and Nyima, who have a seven year old daughter who is being looked after by family, are the only two members of Gyatso staff to remain in prison in one of the most serious political cases in Tibet in recent years (see ICT report at http://www.savetibet.org/news/newsitem.php?id=809).

Because the authorities in Tibet have taken such stringent measures to prevent information about the case reaching the outside world – including the intimidation of Tibetans involved – full information about the sentencing of Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche and Nyima Choedron (Chinese: Nima Quzhen) only recently became available and was reported by ICT last year. The new information obtained by Dui Hua states that Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche's life sentence for 'splittism' was commuted to 19 years on July 13, 2003, and he was granted a year's reduction on November 17, 2005, with his sentence now due to expire on July 20, 2021 (the new sentence is measured from the date the court commuted his sentence from life to fixed-term).

All of the arrests of staff and the closure of the Gyatso school and home in Lhasa were linked by the authorities to an incident on August 26, 1999 when a Tibetan building contractor who had been working at the school, Tashi Tsering, made an attempt to pull down the Chinese flag and raise the Tibetan flag, which is banned in Tibet, in the square in front of the Potala Palace, Lhasa. Tashi Tsering then attempted to detonate explosives strapped to his body, with the intention of killing himself, which failed due to rain. Tashi Tsering was arrested and died in prison in February 2000. Soon after Tashi Tsering's protest, a number of his relatives and associates were arrested and detained for temporary periods, and many of the staff from the Gyatso school, most of whom were known and trusted by several US and UK donors, were charged and sentenced to prison terms of varying length or served terms of 're-education through labor' (laojiao).

At Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche's trial in September 2000 in Lhasa, the authorities charged him with conspiring in a 'plot' with Tashi Tsering to carry out the protest, and they also accused him of links with 'splittist' foreign organizations and the 'renegade' Tibetan exile government. Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche had traveled to India and the West during the 1990s to raise funds for his school, which was funded by at least three organizations, including two charities in the UK and two American groups of sponsors. In his defense, at his trial in September 2000, both Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche and Nyima said that they believed the charge of 'splittism' was not appropriate, but the court maintained the position that they 'collaborated with hostile external forces over a long period of time' and 'participated in activities to split the country and destroy national unity'.

For images of Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche and Nyima before their imprisonment, please see this release online at http://www.savetibet.org/news/newsitem.php?id=920. Note: ICT has received the Tibetan spelling that Bangri Chogtrul Rinpoche uses - "bang-ris mchog-sbrul".

Kate Saunders
Communications Director, ICT
Tel: 1 202-785-1515 x 23
Cell: 1 202 375 4389
email: kates@savetibet.org
This story has been read 8513 times.
Print Send Bookmark and Share
  Readers' Comments »
Founder in Prison (calart)
Your Comments

 Other Stories
Free Tibet Concert to Mark 47th Year of Uprising
Tibetan protest debut
China's prosperity inspires rising spirituality
School founder's sentence reduced: Bangri Rinpoche transferred to new prison
Wangpo Tethong's Open Letter to Hu Jintao
Advertisement
Advertisement
Photo Galleries
Advertisement
envision
Phayul.com does not endorse the advertisements placed on the site. It does not have any control over the google ads. Please send the URL of the ads if found objectionable to editor@phayul.com
Copyright © 2004-2010 Phayul.com   feedback | advertise | contact us
Powered by Lateng Online
Advertisement