Special report: Dalai clique's separatist activities
condemned
LHASA, April 12 (Xinhua) -- A suspect in the Lhasa
riot has confessed slashing an innocent passerby with a long knife, Lhasa police
said on Saturday.
Gungqug Toinzhub, 32, was the No. 2 suspect in a list
of wanted by local police for participation in the March 14 riot. He was nabbed
by police in the Ramogia Monastery in Lhasa on April 6.
The suspect told Xinhua that he slashed a passerby
thrice on the Beijing East Road. He was now remorseful.
The knife was 30 centimeters long as showed by a
police officer, who said Gungqug Toinzhub had stayed in Nepal for one and a half
years after he crossed the border illegally in 2000.
An eyewitness said the suspect holding the knife in
hand was taking the lead in attacking innocent people, and could have injured
more if not stopped by a Tibetan man with long hair.
Eminent monks, masters condemn violence, pray for Olympics
BEIJING, April 12 (Xinhua) -- Dignitary monks and young Buddhist masters from
the Chinese mainland, Hong Kong and Taiwan on Saturday condemned the March 14
Lhasa riot, stressing disruptive activities fundamentally went against the
"mercifulness" essence of Buddhism.
Master Xue Cheng, the Buddhist Association of China vice
secretary-general, said at a forum here that Buddhist commandments advocated
"kind" and "merciful" and the returning favor offered by the country, society
and people. Full story