Special report: Tibet: Its Past and Present
Related: Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao:
Ample facts prove Dalai's role in Lhasa riot
Lhasa calm after
riot 
Chinese judicial organs to
deal with Lhasa rioters 
BEIJING, March 19 (Xinhua) -- A veteran Tibetan
official Ragdi said here Wednesday morning that the recent riot in Lhasa posed a
severe threat to the people's life and social stability.
The crime of rioters, including beating, burning,
robbing and killing, greatly threatened the life of Lhasa residents and resulted
in significant property damages, said Ragdi, former vice-chairman of the
Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, or China's top
legislature.
Ragdi lambasted against the Dalai clique which he
believed instigated and planned the riot in Lhasa last Friday.
Ragdi said a handful of lawless people, chanting
separatist words in downtown Lhasa, burnt more than 200 civilian houses and
shops, destroyed over 50 vehicles, killed 13 innocent people, and seriously
injured a dozen of law-enforcers.
A preliminary investigation showed at least 373
business people and 32 enterprises had reported damages from the riot, with
losses exceeding 99.1 million yuan (about 14 million U.S. dollars) as of Tuesday
night, according to the regional department of commerce.
"The rioters' cruelty has aroused huge indignation
among the people," the Tibet-born politician said.
"We have sufficient evidence proving that the Lhasa
riot was instigated, planned and organized by the Dalai clique," Ragdi said.
"The violent crime instigated by the Dalai clique is
nothing but a symbol that shows fierce head-on combat between us and the Dalai
clique, which has an important political connotation," he said.
The bloody commotion in Lhasa was aimed to reinforce
its compressive stress on undermining the upcoming Beijing Olympics, Ragdi
added.
"Ample facts have proved that the Dalai clique
premeditated the riot, aimed to disturb the social stability at such a sensitive
time. The riot was maliciously incited into a bloody violence in purpose to put
pressure on the Chinese government," he said.
Qiangba Puncog, chairman of the Tibet Autonomous
Regional Government, updated the death toll of civilians from the unrest in
Lhasa on March 14 to 13 at a press conference on Monday, up from the previous
official figure of 10.
"The Lhasa riot has proved once again that the Dalai
clique supported by some western forces hostile to China has never hesitated in
committing secessionist activities," said Ragdi.
"By reporting the violent crime they committed in
Lhasa, we expose their conspiracy to secede Tibet from its motherland and
undermine the peaceful environment for the country's host of the upcoming
Olympics," he said.
At the meeting of the Counseling Committee on
Development of the Tibet Autonomous Region which was held here Wednesday
morning, officials and experts agreed that Tibet is at the prime time of
development. The regional government should seek the golden opportunity to
accelerate social and economic development, while maintaining stability.
The central government has planned to invest 77.8
billion yuan in 180 projects in Tibet between 2006 and 2010 to improve local
infrastructure and the living and production conditions for local farmers and
herdsmen.
The funds used in Tibet's infrastructure construction
and for its fiscal expenditure over the past 50 years have mainly allocated by
the central government. Nine out of ten yuan spent by local finance of Tibet has
come from China's central revenue, according to Qiangba Puncog.