FALL/WINTER TWO THOUSAND SIX
STOP MINING TIBET:
COMPANIES TARGETED FOR DRILLING OPERATIONS The rush of Canadian mining companies seeking to exploit Tibet’s gold and copper resources has sounded alarm bells for Tibetans and their supporters worldwide. Under Chinese occupation, Tibetans are unable to exercise their internationally recognized right to determine the use of their own natural resources. Mine operations pose a serious threat to Tibet’s environment, Tibetans’ cultural survival, and help entrench China’s control over Tibet. The Chinese government is aggressively promoting Tibet to foreign mining firms in order to benefit from Tibet’s resources while consolidating control over the region by moving an ever-increasing number of Chinese settlers into Tibet to work on mining and other resource extraction projects. If international companies are successful in setting up operations in Tibet, it will be an open invitation to Chinese and other foreign firms to join them. This would mean increased extraction of Tibet’s resources without the consent of local people, increased environmental damage, and increased support for the Chinese government’s efforts to move large numbers of Chinese into Tibet. While mining projects would have serious long-term political impacts, they would also have SFT Vancouver Protesting HDI Mining devastating social and economic impacts. For example, gold mining is a process that is particularly destructive to local environments for a number of reasons, including the chemicals that are used to process gold minerals - usually cyanide or arsenic - and the sheer volume of waste rock left behind. One Canadian company, Hunter Dickinson, is drilling at a site in Shethongmon that is very close to the Yarlung Tsangpo River, the main water source for Shigatse, Tibet’s largest city, and other Tibetan communities living downstream. Water contamination would have serious health effects on the local people. Continued on pg. 7
BEIJING
ACTION
On June 28th, a small group of activists from SFT and Free Tibet Campaign (FTC) arrived in Beijing with one goal: to disrupt the launch of the China-Tibet railway. The momentum had been building for weeks. Hundreds of articles and television programs were focusing on the historic and controversial railway; SFT was preparing for an international day of action as part of the “Reject the Railway” campaign; and scores of Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) members had just been arrested for storming the Chinese embassy in New Delhi. Now we had brought the campaign directly to Beijing and were determined to insert the voice of opposition into the stories written by foreign journalists who would be riding the first train to Lhasa.
The courageous activists who staged the Railway banner hang
China’s Tibet Railway: Designed to Destroy
From the top of Beijing’s central rail station
Following is a first hand account of how the action unfolded from Kathy Ni Keefe, one of the three women who participated in the action. Kathy is a long-time Tibet supporter and a former member of SFT’s Board of Directors. As we walked to the train station from our hotel on the day of the action, my stomach felt knotted. What would the police response be like? We had heard of western activists being treated leniently in China. And some…not so leniently. What would happen to us? Even as these questions ran through my head, I knew what I needed to do. I knew that my voice could be heard and that I was able and willing to carry out this action. I knew that the Tibetans inside Tibet who have grave concerns about this railway could not speak out as I could without the risk of imprisonment, torture, and even death. We had prepared well and we were ready. Omi Hodwitz of Canada and Katie Mallin of the United Kingdom were the other two activists who took part in this action. As we walked into the station, my nervousness subsided. We were in motion. Omi took a walk past the window to make sure all was well while Katie and I sipped orange soda at a café. It was time. One by one, we climbed through the window and out onto the ledge. People crowded the square below, filing into the station, on their way to journeys unknown to us. With our banner unfurled, we stood delivering our message: “China’s Tibet Railway: Designed to Destroy”. This train is a lie. It was not built for Tibetans. It is a political move by Chinese government officials. It is designed to destroy. We expected to get hauled away quickly and aggressively and were surprised that we were able to stand out on the ledge for at least five minutes. Security had seen us, but apparently no one wanted to take responsibility. Finally, the police came, took us back inside, and led us to the police station across the square. After a few hours of questioning about why and how we did this, we were free to go. This quick release seemed to be a decision from up on high…a desire from the Chinese leadership to make us go away as quickly as possible – and a sign that the pressure and mounting scrutiny around the railway was being felt.
2 E.D. Letter
Board Letter
Staff Changes
6 Chapter Updates
Nangpa Pass
SFT Canada
SFT India
3 Rejecting The Railway Olympics Update 4 Free Tibet! Action Camp VII 7 Inside Tibet ‘07 Featured Speakers Bhuchung Sonam Poem