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lunes, junio 29

The International Tibet Support Network (ITSN) is a global coalition of Tibet-related non-governmental organisations Posted Tue, 12/09/2008 - 14:58 by superuser Banner: monkshorns Strapline: The International Tibet Support Network (ITSN) is a global coalition of Tibet-related non-governmental organisations The International Tibet Support Network is a vibrant coalition of more than 165 Tibet groups on six continents. The Network is dedicated to campaigning non-violently to restore the rights that Tibetans lost when China occupied Tibet sixty years ago. The International Tibet Support Network was created to strengthen individual member organisations and to make the Tibet movement as a whole more effective by coordinating powerful strategic campaigns on behalf of the Tibetan people. The situation for Tibetans in Tibet is critical at present; China has imposed de facto martial law and arrested thousands of people in the last twelve months, as Tibetans continue to protest against the occupation; meanwhile China's dialogue with the Dalai Lama's representatives is at apparent stalemate. Tibet needs your support. Please get involved: find a Tibet group to join, send an email to China's Ministry of Justice to stop China executing two Tibetans, or donate to this important cause. International Tibet Support Network, support rally We hope you enjoy this website. If you find that access is denied to parts of the site, this is because these pages are available only to ITSN's member organisations. For more information Contact Us. Urgent Action! STOP DEATH SENTENCES IN TIBET Write to China's Ministry of Justice Over 5,600 emails sent so far! Click here to see which prominent Tibet supporters have signed Vàclav Havel's death sentences appeal. Find a Tibet Group Want to get involved? Find a Tibet organisation near you, using our worldwide interactive map... Find a group Facts about Tibet Tibet lies at the centre of Asia, with an area of 2.5 million square kilometres (approximately 1 million square miles). Despite over 50 years of Chinese occupation of Tibet, the Tibetan people refuse to be conquered and subjugated by China. The Tibetan Plateau is the highest and biggest plateau in the world, so Tibet is referred to as “the roof of the world”. For Tibetans, the term Tibet means the 3 provinces of U'Tsang, Kham and Amdo, the area traditionally known as Tibet before China's invasion. The English word Tibet is derived from the Arabic word Tubbat. This word is in turn derived via Persian from the Turkic word Tobad, meaning ‘the heights’. Tibet was occupied by China in 1949, and the Dalai Lama fled into exile in India in 1959. Hundreds of thousands of Tibetans have died as a direct result of Chinese occupation since 1949. There are six million Tibetans in Tibet and roughly 150,000 Tibetans in exile in India and other countries. Tibetans consider the Dalai Lama to be the temporal as well as spiritual leader of Tibet. Thousands of Tibetans cross the mighty Himalaya on foot every year into exile, risking death, injuries and arrest. Most Tibetans are Buddhist, but there are Muslims, Christians and practitioners of Bon, the indigenous religion of Tibet. In 1948 Tibetan government representatives traveled to the US, UK and France on Tibetan government issued passports. The exiled Tibetan people elected their first Prime Minister in 2000 In 2008, Tibetans took part in more than 130 separate peaceful protests against the Chinese government across the Tibetan Plateau. Displaying a photograph of the Dalai Lama in Tibet can result in arrest. In 1995 the Chinese government abducted the 6 year old Panchen Lama, one of Tibet's most important spiritual leaders. He is still missing. The longest epic poem in the world is the story of a legendary Tibetan king, Gesar of Ling. The Tibetan Plateau is the Earth's "Third Pole," providing life-sustaining waters for and regulating weather across south and east Asia. March 10 is Tibetan National Uprising day. It marks the massive uprising in Tibet in 1959 that led to the escape of the Dalai Lama into exile. Yak is a Tibetan term for the male of the species. Its female counterpart is called Dri. Tibetans are denied many of the rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, including the right to self- determination, freedom of speech and religion. Untll 1949 Tibet had its own government that managed its own domestic and foreign affairs; Tibet had its own national flag and its own currency. According to Amnesty International more than 1,000 Tibetans were unaccounted for after the protests of 2008. In the Tibetan Lunar Calendar, the year 2009 corresponds to the year 2136, the Year of the Earth Ox. Prior to the uprisings of 2008, the last major protests by Tibetans against China's occupation of Tibet took place in 1989, when martial law was declared. Make a Donation We greatly appreciate any donation you can make to our cause... Donate * About Tibet * Find a Tibet Group * Campaigns * Donate