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Dalai Lama admitted to hospital

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 All of our prayers are with the Dalai Lama and wish him a quick return to perfect health. -Free Tibet Campaign USA
Dalai Lama arrives at Indian hospital, 28 Aug 2008
The Dalai Lama arrives at hospital and will undergo tests on Friday

The Dalai Lama has been taken to hospital in the Indian city of Mumbai (Bombay) complaining of stomach pains.

The 73-year-old exiled Tibetan spiritual leader had cancelled all his international trips on Wednesday saying he was suffering from exhaustion.

A spokesman said the ailment had not yet been diagnosed but it appeared there was no cause for concern.

The Dalai Lama has lived in Dharamsala, northern India, since fleeing Tibet after an abortive uprising in 1959.

Trips cancelled

His spokesman, Tenzin Taklha, told the AFP news agency: "There is nothing major to feel concerned about. But he has been admitted to the Lilivati Hospital in Mumbai because he was feeling some discomfort in his abdomen.

Last Updated ( Friday, 29 August 2008 04:58 ) Read more...
 

China Sentences 2 Elderly Women To Labor Camp For Protest Plans

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BEIJING — Two elderly Chinese women who applied to hold a protest during the Olympics were ordered to spend a year in a labor camp, a relative said Wednesday. Police later squelched a pro-Tibet demonstration.

The women were still at home three days after being officially notified they would have to serve a yearlong term of reeducation through labor, but were under surveillance by a government-backed neighborhood group, said Li Xuehui, the son of one of the women.

Li said no cause was given for the order to imprison his 79-year-old mother, Wu Dianyuan, and her neighbor Wang Xiuying, 77.

"Wang Xiuying is almost blind and disabled. What sort of re-education through labor can she serve?" Li said in a telephone interview. "But they can also be taken away at any time."

Meanwhile, swarms of plainclothes police set upon four foreign activists early Thursday as they tried to stage a protest against Chinese rule over Tibet _ the latest in a series of unsanctioned demonstrations to occur during the Olympics.

Last Updated ( Thursday, 28 August 2008 04:13 ) Read more...
 

One Picture - Worth One Thousand Words

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Last Updated ( Monday, 18 August 2008 16:03 )
 

Tibet demo Britons 'to be deported'

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Two British Free Tibet campaigners are in custody in China after unfurling a Tibetan flag and banner outside the Olympic stadium.

Lucy Fairbrother, 23, and Iain Thom, 24, were arrested in Beijing alongside two US activists. All four are expected to be deported at the earliest opportunity, according to Chinese news agency Xinhua.

As the British Embassy in the Chinese capital continued to try to get access to the pair, who are members of Students for a Free Tibet (SFT), their families spoke of their pride.

London-based Miss Fairbrother has been involved with SFT since she was a sixth-form student and was president of the group at Bristol University before graduating last summer. Her mother Linda said: "Lucy is fighting for the freedom and democracy of Tibet and is doing what she feels is right, and what I feel is right. Obviously I'm worried - any parent would be - but I am certain that China would not resort to torture or abuse when the eyes of the world are upon them."

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 06 August 2008 23:38 ) Read more...
 

Virtual Beijing police to patrol in cyber world

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A policeman and a policewoman would be on duty around the clock on Beijing's gateway websites starting from Saturday, accepting complaints mainly about the cyber world.

A Beijing netizen need only click the two cartoon police if he or she wants to report malicious information or pornographic websites. Then the netizen shall fill in a form to end the whole reporting processing, Beijing police said Tuesday at a press conference.

Police would offer a feedback in 30 minutes after they received valid calls, said Zhao Hongzhi, deputy director of the Internet department of the Beijing police bureau.

The cartoon policeman and policewoman would pop up on web pages every 30 minutes. They would patrol Beijing's gateway websites as of September 1 and all websites and forums in Beijing since December.

Police would only take action on disputes on virtual assets and Internet accounts, which are common in China at present, if the accused people had breached the law, and also handle calls of emergencies in real world.

Police shall safeguard the virtual world as it has a growing impact on the real world, Zhao said.

Beijing police have closed 224 pornographic websites so far this year and deleted nearly 130,000 pieces of malicious information on the Internet.

In 1987, China recorded its first e-mail, signaling its entry into the Internet era. The number of Internet users in China hit an estimated 162 million by the end of June, with nearly 100 people a minute going online, according to the China Internet Network Information Centre.

Beijing has 5.46 million Internet users while more than 300,000 Chinese websites are registered in the capital city.

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-08-29 20:34

 

 
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Newsflash

Two British Free Tibet campaigners are in custody in China after unfurling a Tibetan flag and banner outside the Olympic stadium.

Lucy Fairbrother, 23, and Iain Thom, 24, were arrested in Beijing alongside two US activists. All four are expected to be deported at the earliest opportunity, according to Chinese news agency Xinhua.

As the British Embassy in the Chinese capital continued to try to get access to the pair, who are members of Students for a Free Tibet (SFT), their families spoke of their pride.

London-based Miss Fairbrother has been involved with SFT since she was a sixth-form student and was president of the group at Bristol University before graduating last summer. Her mother Linda said: "Lucy is fighting for the freedom and democracy of Tibet and is doing what she feels is right, and what I feel is right. Obviously I'm worried - any parent would be - but I am certain that China would not resort to torture or abuse when the eyes of the world are upon them."