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不知道是什么人在散播。实在是太丧心病狂了。居然写得这样煞有介事。
一定要跟这些网站澄清真相。
原文:
Tibet watch: Mass executions in Lhasa on March 16th?
1:47 pm EDT Apr 01, 2008
(MountEverest.net) Careful before you check the images illustrating this story: allegedly shot in Tibet on January 2005, they are disturbing.
This year, following the March 14 unrest in Lhasa, an eerie silence was reported from the blacked-out city. Over 200 military vehicles, tanks and armored personnel carriers entered Lhasa with an estimated 10,000 People's Liberation Army soldiers to be stationed in the city. Door-to-door searches commenced.
On the 16th, ExWeb's reporter in Lhasa reported gunfire in the eastern part of the city. Later that night, Tibetan authorities ordered all media to leave on the next day. In the morning, security searched the reporters' hotel rooms, confiscated memory cards and deleted pictures from their computers.
Former President of the Czech Republic, Vaclav Havel, warned that the attempt to seal off Tibet from the rest of the world was the most dangerous situation, adding "the 'harmony' trumpeted by China right now is known as the peace of the graveyard."
Report from a graveyard?
As for the "quiet days," here's a letter from Nepal, sent by a western woman to a western blog last week. The woman reportedly has family in Tibet and states that all her relatives there have been arrested. Here's her testimony:
"Tibetan families in Lhasa were arrested on March, 15th and 16, nevertheless if they participated in the revolt or not. March 16 at night, half of all the persons arrested on March 14-15-16 were shot - they were took out at night secretly, 60 persons per one closed lorry, and dug a communal grave in the fields outside Lhasa and then shot."
"In villages Tibetians are being shot in place without court. All phones are listened by Chinese, it's a timeless imprisonment for conversations on a theme of disorders in Tibet and the Chinese policy by phone, and Tibetians ask not to call them, since calls from abroad are undesirable."
"But nevertheless, in couple of weeks Tibet can be open again for tourists to show, that Chineses solve everything peacefully, but after Olympic Games it can be close again - on March, 16th Tibetians have been already promised the total "cleaning" after Games..."
(Ed: ExWeb has changed little in the direct translation of the posting, originally made in a non-English language. Also other details have been withheld for the woman's protection.)
What is China hiding?
Except for sporadic, anonymous reports from "the other side" and images from previous events, at this point Chinese media's unreliable version is all we have to assess the current situation.
Late last week, CNN showed a small group of journalists being guided around town by Chinese officials, when at the Jokhang temple about 30 young monks unexpectedly surrounded the group and started shouting: "They are tricking you, they are telling lies, don't believe them." The footage showed incredible despair; as they called out to the westerners, some of the young men trembled in terror.
On Saturday, a group of foreign diplomats ended a two-day visit to Tibet. According to the US State Department, the diplomats had not been allowed to hold unsupervised interviews.
After their departure, reports arrived about a new protest on Saturday involving many Tibetans, possibly linked to an attempt by armed police to detain Tibetans in central Lhasa.
Yet China Daily reported that Lhasa was calm yesterday, "the 65km bus drive from Gongga airport to downtown Lhasa is very pleasant," wrote Wu Jiao, "the Lhasa River flows quietly along the highway, with wild ducks swimming around leisurely..."
All well in Lhasa, or the peace of the graveyard?
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