Special report: Dalai's separatist activities condemned
LHASA, March 15 (Xinhua) -- After a day of rioting that killed 10 people on Friday, Lhasa reported no new incidents of violence on Saturday in the Tibetan regional capital.
Friday's riot involved beatings, vandalism, looting
of shops and arson orchestrated by the Dalai clique, disturbing 18 years of
tranquility in the city.
Traffic control was imposed on major streets, leaving
few cars on the road on Saturday. Photos showed cars overturned, burnt
motorcycles and bicycles scattered on the main streets. The air was tinged with
smoke, according to local witnesses.
Most shops in the city were closed on Saturday. In
downtown areas, about a 100 shops were ransacked and vandalized. Smoke belched
from shops destroyed in the riot.
Power supply resumed in quarters along Duosenge Road,
the area worst hit by the violence in the downtown. The local phone service,
however, could not be resumed for the moment as the communications
infrastructure was destroyed in the violence.
According to the witnesses, the unrest started around
1:10 p.m. on Friday when some people brandishing batons and knives took to the
main streets, clashing with and stoning local police around the Ramogia
Monastery in downtown Lhasa.
Rioters later began gathering around 2 p.m. near the
Ramogia monastery, and set fire to shops along two main streets, and around
Jokhang temple and Chomsigkang market.
They torched buildings for civilian use at 160
places, including banks, a press establishment, shops, schools and hospitals.
This caused blackouts and interruption of communications in some areas. Shops
close to the Jokhang temple and Ramogia monastery were shut down.
Among the dead were two hotel employees and two shop
owners. A mob reportedly used double-barrel rifles to kill two business people.
"The victims are all innocent civilians, and most
were burnt to death," said a regional government official.
No casualties have been reported among foreigners, an
official with the foreign affairs office of the regional government said.
"We have not received any report that foreigners
suffered injuries or death in the beating, smashing, looting and burning on
Friday," the official said.
A Tibetan government official told Xinhua there had
been enough evidence to prove the sabotage was "organized, premeditated and
masterminded" by the Dalai clique.
The violence, involving beating, smashing, looting
and burning, had disrupted public order and jeopardized people's lives and
property, the official said.
Xinhua reporters in Lhasa saw many rioters carrying
backpacks filled with stones and bottles of inflammable liquids, some holding
iron bars, wooden sticks and long knifes, signs the crowd had come fully
prepared and meant harm.
The mobs assaulted passersby, sparing no women or
children, witnesses said. They hit at things along their path, smashing windows,
automatic teller machines and traffic lights. Several clothing shops,
restaurants and mobile phone stores were looted. Bikes, motorcycles and cars
were burnt.
After the violence broke out, the Tibet Autonomous
Regional Party and government authorities set up a command headquarters that
quickly mobilized security personnel to maintain order and disperse the crowds.
Fire fighters were also called in to put out fires at different places and to
help rescue innocent, stranded people. The injured were hospitalized.
Armed police in Lhasa rescued more than 580 people,
including three Japanese tourists, as well as students and teaching faculty of a
primary school and a middle school, Tibet Autonomous Region government sources
said on Saturday.
The injuries and economic losses caused by Friday's
violence are still under investigation.
The Lhasa government published a letter late on
Friday asking urban dwellers to show support for the government in its efforts
to clamp down on perpetrators according to law.
"Cadres, workers and residents in Lhasa shall have a
good understanding of the current situation. Be firm with the efforts to fight
against all forms of secessionist activities," said the letter.
"Stay away from lawbreaking acts meant to cause
social disturbances and harm the interests of the broad masses of the people,
and consciously safeguard social stability and your own legitimate rights,
support the government's crackdown on all forms of criminal activities, so that
together we can maintain harmony and stability in Tibet."
Meanwhile, law enforcement authorities in Tibet Autonomous Region issued a notice on Saturday urging lawbreakers in the riot to stop their criminal activities. They were offering leniency to those who voluntarily surrendered.
The notice, which was jointly issued by the Tibetan Higher People's Court, the regional people's procuratorate and the regional public security bureau, demanded the lawbreakers to give themselves up by Monday midnight.
