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Tibetan refugees shot at by Chinese troops: activists

by Staff Writers
Kathmandu (AFP) Oct 31, 2007
Refugees trying to flee Chinese-controlled Tibet to Nepal have been shot at by soldiers, a year after a nun was shot and killed in the same area, an activist group said Wednesday.

"No Tibetans in the group were killed or injured but several of them... were taken into Chinese custody," the International Campaign for Tibet said.

In September 2006, foreign climbers on Nepal's border with Tibet filmed Chinese border guards shooting and killing a young Buddhist nun, one of a group of around 70 people who were trying to flee to Nepal.

In the latest incident reported by the Washington-based group, around 30 Tibetans were trying to cross the high altitude Nang Pa La pass between Tibet and Nepal when they were shot at last month.

"The shooting on October 18 indicates that firing on unarmed Tibetans escaping into exile, including children, is still regarded by the Chinese authorities as 'normal border management,' as Beijing informed western governments last year," it said in a statement.

Those who evaded capture are in a refugee reception centre in Kathmandu after making the gruelling journey across the Himalayas.

Despite the arduous journey and risks from Chinese soldiers, around 2,500 people continue to make the dangerous trip out of Tibet every year.

Most refugees are then transferred to the government-in-exile set up by the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, in Dharamsala in northern India.

The Dalai Lama fled Tibet in 1959 after an abortive uprising against Chinese rule.

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Salary of urban Chinese rise sharply in 2007: govt
Beijing (AFP) Oct 29, 2007
The salaries of people working in China's cities grew by 18.8 percent in the first nine months of the year, with those in state-owned firms rising the fastest, the government said Monday.







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