Special report: Dalai's separatist activities condemned
BEIJING, March 17 (Xinhua) -- The riot in Lhasa last Friday caused heavy losses of life and property, and seriously disturbed social order, the head of the regional government said on Monday.
Qiangba Puncog, chairman of Tibet Autonomous Regional
Government, told a news briefing in Beijing that rioters in the regional capital
set fires at more than 300 locations, including homes and 214 shops, and smashed
and burned 56 vehicles.
Thirteen innocent civilians were burned or stabbed to
death, he said, citing two cases of what he described as brutality.
In one case, a civilian was reportedly doused with
gasoline by rioters and burned to death. In another case, rioters beat a patrol
policeman unconscious, and then cut a piece of flesh from his buttocks.
Sixty-one members of the armed police, who were
instructed not to use force, were also injured, including six who were
critically ill.
The unrest was "organized" and "premeditated" by the
Dalai Lamaclique, he said.
Since March 10, more than 300 monks from the Zhaibung
Monastery ventured into downtown Lhasa. The monks, who were supposedly adherents
of peace, were aggressive, and flagrantly confrontational with the security
forces.
In the Sera Monastery, 10 monks held up flags of the
so-called Tibetan exile government and shouted "Tibetan independence." In the
ensuing days, some monks chanted independence slogans and challenged officers
who were maintaining order, he said
In attempts to create sensation, three monks in the
Zhaibung monastery lacerated their bodies with knives and took pictures of one
another, and blaming others for the harm they inflicted upon themselves, police
sources said.
Rioters on Friday set off a destructive rampage,
setting fire to buildings, police cars and private vehicles and looting banks,
schools and shops, said police sources.
"Most of Friday's violence took place in the
commercial streets of Bargor, Linkuo, Sera and the Ngaqen Road, Second Ring Road
and Beijing Middle Road in downtown area of Lhasa," said Qiangba.
The No. 2 Lhasa Middle School, the Haicheng Primary
School and the Chomsigkang Market were targeted by rioters, who smashed, stoned,
looted and committed arson, he said.
A branch of the Bank of China, outlets of China
Mobile, the Lhasa Branch of the Xinhua News Agency, the office of Tibet Daily
and a number of government offices were attacked by vandals, the regional
government chairman said.
