Special report: Dalai's separatist activities condemned
LHASA, March 16 (Xinhua) -- Government agencies and
schools will resume normal operation Monday in Lhasa as the city gradually
returned to calm after Friday's unrest.
The government of the Tibet Autonomous Region
informed the decision with the agencies and schools, which suffered great
damages and had been closed since Friday afternoon, an government official told
Xinhua.
Many shops were reopened and private cars and taxi
cabs were back on the streets on Sunday in Lhasa, as the city returned to calm
after Friday's riot.
Xinhua's Lhasa Bureau reporters saw many stores along
the western Beijing Road, western Jinzhu Road and southern Linkuo Road open on
Sunday afternoon. Taxis and cars were back on the roads.
Yangzom, a woman of Tibetan ethnicity who lives on
western Jinzhu Road, said her life remained largely unaffected by the riot.
"Grocery stalls and shops in my neighborhood are still open," she said.
On the western Beijing Road, a private gas station
was also doing business. "The shop opens for the day now, and closes during the
night," its owner Wang said.
But most shops in the Old Town area were still
closed. Several shops were partially burnt down, while charred wreckages of cars
were strewn about some sections of the streets.
Civil servants and local residents took to the
streets on Sunday afternoon to clean up the aftermath from the turmoil in the
worst-hit areas in downtown Lhasa.
The cleaners swept garbage, shoveled away stones and
removed overturned cars, burnt motorcycles and bicycles off streets, all in the
Old Town area of the plateau city. Some wore helmets and gloves and were warned
of the dangers of building collapse and being hurt by broken glass.
Soi'nam Gyaincain, a worker's union president at the
regional electrical company, said more than 100 employees joined in the
cleaning. "We want a clean and orderly city back," he said.
Yangjain, a local Tibetan who helped clean up the
trash, said she was appalled by what the lawless mobs did. "They stirred up a
decent city and turned it into chaos. They were horrible."
Hao Peng, the Tibet Autonomous Region government
deputy chairman, said the debris would be cleaned away soon and order restored
to the regional capital.
An outburst of commotion broke the peace in Lhasa on
Friday afternoon. Sources with the local government said on Saturday that at
least 10 people were confirmed dead, mostly civilians who were burned.
The rioters torched buildings for civilian use at 160 places, including banks, a press establishment, shops, schools and hospitals. Dozens of vehicles, including police wagons, were burnt.
Lhasa Mayor Doje Cezhug, who was in Beijing for the annual session of China's top legislature, told reporters on Sunday that, to his knowledge, the city was now calm.
