This content was first published by Radio Free Asia, and it is now being reprinted with permission.
Tibetans marched for an ending to Chinese tyranny on Monday, marking the start of the revolt against Chinese rule in cities all over Europe, North America, and India.
Tibetans and their followers gathered in Sydney, Taipei, London, New York, Washington, and Toronto, among others, with heads painted in the blue and red of the Tibetan national symbol and shouting phrases in a slew of different cultures.
Some of the demonstrations took position outside Chinese offices. As some demonstrators attempted to enter the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi, officers clashed with lots of Tibetan demonstrators.
Supporters carried banners with the slogans” World Leaders, Stand up for Tibet,” “CCP, Stop hurting Tibetans,” and” Missing Home Since 1959″
The Tibetan regional flag, which is prohibited inside Tibet, was commonly seen.
In Ladakh in northern India, Guwahati in north India, and Mysore in north India, demonstrations were held for the 66th celebration of the Tibetan Uprising.
In 1950, China invaded and violently conquered Tibet. Nine years later, there was concern that the Dalai Lama, Tibet’s religious leader, may be arrested by the Chinese, who had fled Lhasa to India several months later.
In the rebellion of 1959, a Chinese onslaught followed, killing thousands of Tibetans. Tibetans have since used March 10 to respect their bravery, demand that China prevent its oppression of Tibetans, and express their desire for a free and peaceful country.
For Chinese regulators in Tibet, who constantly enact security and surveillance steps in Tibetan regions to thwart protests ahead of the celebration, the date continues to be socially sensitive.
” Freedom from Taiwanese causes”
The Tibetan government-in-exile is located in Dharamsala, India, where the Central Tibetan Administration, or CTA, organized an official occasion.
At the ceremony, which included past Slovakian President Andrej Kiska and Estonian legislator Juku-Kalle Raid, CTA President Sikyong Penpa Tsering said,” We respect our brave saints and show solidarity with our brothers and sisters inside Tibet who continue to linger under the oppressive Chinese authorities.”
Tibetans protested in 1959 from his Dharamsala home out of a” feel of real desperation.”
He claimed that there was only one way to escape. My heart felt a little big, I thought. A farmer who was leading my horses told me to take one final look at Lhasa after I crossed a river because I won’t be able to see it after this point.
He said,” So I turned and made my horse face Lhasa and said my prayers.” I experienced happiness and freedom as I made my way southward, crossing the river, and through the moves.
Tibet has endured ever since, he said, despite Foreign work to” clean Tibet from the face of the earth”.
Lhasa’s limited safety
Over 3, 000 Tibetans and followers from several European nations gathered in The Hague in the Netherlands to take part in a march called” Europe, Stand with Tibet” that is held every two times in a main European city.
French members of parliament, artist Richard Gere, and ex-nba player Enes Kanter Freedom were speakers at the protest.
Tibetans are still having a lot of issues under Chinese guideline, according to Khander for Radio Free Asia. Therefore, as a follower of international human rights and peace, I vouch for the Tibetan people and action.
On Sunday, more than 500 individuals gathered in Taipei, largely Chinese and about 40 Tibetans. Tibetans should unite with Taiwan’s citizens to keep China accountable for its human rights violations in Tibet, according to staff from Taiwan’s Human Rights Commission.
In several locations throughout the United States, including Berkeley and Richmond in California, Burlington in Vermont, and East Rutherford in New Jersey, the Tibetan regional flag was hoisted. More than 400 German towns, districts, and municipalities erected the Tibetan symbol to express their continued persecution.
Since the beginning of March, Chinese officials have been stationed inside Tibet, including in the Jokhang Temple and Sera Monastery, along with police and military personnel, according to two local sources who spoke to RFA.
According to the sources, police are patrolling mostly Tibetan neighborhoods at 3 a.m., while visitors from other Tibetan regions who want to enter Lhasa are being denied for even small documentation issues.