Special report: Dalai's separatist activities condemned
LHASA, March 21 (Xinhua) -- More than 100 citizens mourned five women victims of the Tibet riot in front of the shop where they died.
Holding lilies and candles, mourners shuffled slowly
forward in a queue. They put flowers and candles in front of the young women's
photos posted on the burnt wall of the shop.
The five were sales assistants in a Yishion clothing
store on a busy commercial street in downtown Lhasa. They were burnt to death in
a fire started by rioters during the Lhasa riot last week.
They were Cering Zhoigar from Xigaze, Han Xinxin from
Henan Province, and Chen Jia, Yang Dongmei and Liu Yan all from neighboring
Sichuan Province.
"We were surrounded by yelling and the noise of
windows shattering sometime after 2 p.m.," said their 20-year-old colleague
Zhoi'ma, the only survivor.
The young women huddled together, shaking and crying,
when the mobs broke in to smash up the shop, Zhoi'ma said. "We were too scared
to even breath."
When flames spread upstairs, Zhoi'ma was the only one
who squeezed through a small gap torn in the shop door by the mob.
"I can't eat. I can't sleep. I see their faces
whenever I close my eyes," Zhoi'ma said.
"I should have looked back. I shouted to them to
follow me. I thought they were following me, but they didn't," said Zhoi'ma, the
only survivor. "If I had looked back, they would be with me now."
Chen Jia, 18 and the youngest of the five, sent a
text message to her father at 3:42 p.m. on that fateful day, saying, "Mobs are
killing people around my shop. We dare not go out. Don't worry about me. Tell
mum and my sister not to go out."
Ten minutes later, the shop was on fire.
"My girl was wonderful. We all loved her," said Chen
Jun, Chen Jia's father said.
Yishion's owner, Tang Yanqing, from neighboring
Qinghai Province, later found the bodies in the attic of her shop.
They were sitting and lying around a bed, their faces
burnt black, said Tang, whose younger cousin Yang Dongmei was among the dead.
Cering Zhoigar's aunt fainted when she saw the site
of the 21-year-old's death on Tuesday, said Cering Zhoigar's brother, Damzhin.
"Why did they do this to her?" asked Damzhin.
A young women works nearby named Ma Xiaolan burst
into tears at the scene. She said: "Cering Zhoigar and Chen Jia were my best
friends in Lhasa. I knocked on Yishion's door to warn them to escape in time. I
didn't know that it would be the final goodbye."
A young Tibetan named Samzhub and his four colleagues
hurried to the site from another town on hearing the sad story. They put their
candles in front of the photos and bowed.
"I am too sad to say anything. These mobs were
merciless," Samzhub said.
The 18-year-old Chen Jia's father murmured again and
again: "Jiajia, I wish you a good journey to heaven."
Chen Jun thanked the people who had come to mourn his
daughter. More and more people joined in the queue, silently. They offered
lilies in remembrance of the young women, as soft snow fell all around.
