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31 July 2006
Commentary manuscript lands Tibetan youth ten years in
prison

According to confirmed information received by the
Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD),
a Tibetan youth, Dolma Kyab, 29 years old, has been
sentenced to ten years¡¯ imprisonment term for writing
and maintaining a commentary manuscript about Tibet.
He is currently imprisoned at Chushul (Ch: Qushui)
Prison, ¡°Tibet Autonomous Region¡± (¡°TAR¡±). Dolma Kyab a.k.a Lobsang Kelsang Gyatso (pen name) was
arrested on 9 March 2005 in Lhasa where he was
teaching History at a Middle School. As a passion for
writing, he maintained a commentary manuscript written
in Chinese titled ¡°Himalaya on Stir¡± (Chinese: Sao
dong de Ximalayashan), which was a compilation of 57
chapters written on various topics about democracy,
sovereignty of Tibet, Tibet under communism, colonialism, religion and belief etc. Along side the
manuscript, he also began writing another one on the
geographical aspects of Tibet, which was comparatively
short, yet touched on sensitive topics about the location and number of Chinese military camps in
Chinese occupied Tibet etc. Upon arrest in March 2005, Dolma Kyab was first
detained at the ¡°TAR¡± Public Security Bureau Detention
Centre, popularly known as Seitru in Tibetan. On 16 September 2005, Lhasa People¡¯s
Intermediate Court wrongly charged him of ¡°Endangering State Security¡± and passed a verdict of
ten years¡¯ imprisonment term. Although his family
appealed for a just retrial, the court upheld the sentence on 30 November 2005. Upon the declaration of
sentence, he was shifted to the then newly opened Chushul Prison. However, the prison officials refused
to accept him as a prisoner because Dolma had contracted Tuberculosis whilst in detention. After
some treatment, he was transferred to Chushul Prison
in March 2006 soon after the Tibetan New Year and continues to be
imprisoned there. TCHRD is highly concerned about Dolma Kyab and seeks
the support of human rights groups and the international community in securing his release. The
Centre deems the case as an outright clamp down on the
freedom of opinion and expression in Tibet. Freedom of
Expression is a fundamental human rights which is a
prerequisite to the enjoyment of all human rights.
Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
proclaims: ¡®Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom
to hold opinions without interference and to seek,
receive and impart information and ideas through any
media and regardless of frontiers¡¯.
The Centre calls upon the UN Special Rapporteur on the
promotion and protection of the right to freedom of
opinion and expression, Mr. Ambeyi Ligabo, and also
the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to issue their
intervention on the case of Dolma Kyab. Background information about Dolma Kyab
Dolma Kyab a.k.a Lobsang Kelsang Gyatso (pen name) was
born in 1976 to Mr Khetsun and Mrs. Dolma in Ari Village, Chilen (Ch: Qilian) County, Tsochang
¡°Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture¡± (¡°TAP¡±), Qinghai. He attended the local Primary School in 1984 and later
joined the County Middle School. After completing his
schooling in 1995, he joined a Teachers Training Centre and served as a teacher in a Middle School in
Chilen County. He later went to a University in Beijing to continue his studies. In 2003, he came to India to learn English and Hindi
languages and returned to Tibet in May 2004. Upon return, he served as a History teacher in a Middle
School in Lhasa until arrest.
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