Missing Tibetan writer reportedly detained in Qinghai jail
The Tibetan writer and poet Gendun Lhundrub (47), who has been held incommunicado for more than a year after his arrest in 2020, is being detained in a prison in Siling (in Chinese, Xining), says Radio Free Asia (RFA) quoting Tibetans with knowledge of his situation.
“We have learned that Gendun Lhundrub whose whereabouts remained unknown until now is being detained at a detention center in Siling,” said a Tibetan who lives inside the Tibet Autonomous Region. “However, his family members are still not allowed to see him, and no information about his condition has been revealed.”Formerly a monk at Rongwo monastery (Tibet) Lhundrub had been monitored by authorities for signs of political dissent before he was detained, a Tibetan living in exile told RFA.
Authorities arrested Lhundrub on Dec. 2, 2020, in western China’s Qinghai province while he was on his way to attend a religious debate in Rebgong. He was put in the back of a police car and was whisked away.
He is reportedly undergoing political re-education program for which he must translate Tibetan Buddhist scripts into Mandarin Chinese, source said. The Chinese Communist Party requires Tibetan Buddhist studies to be taught exclusively in Chinese.
Chinese officials told Lhundrub’s family in a September 2021 phone call that the writer’s trial would soon be held but have not heard anything since, said a second Tibetan who lives in exile.
“According to a source close to Lhundrub, there is still no news about his trial, but he is being detained at a special detention center where his life is not under threat,” the source said.
Chinese authorities have frequently detained Tibetan writers and artists who promote Tibetan national identity and culture — with many sentenced to lengthy prison terms — following region-wide protests against Chinese rule that swept Tibet and Tibetan areas in western provinces of China in 2008.
Language rights have become a particular focus for Tibetan efforts to assert national identity in recent years, with informally organized language courses typically deemed “illegal associations” and teachers subject to detention and arrest, sources say.
Authorities have also issued orders to Buddhist monks and nuns about using Mandarin Chinese instead of Tibetan.
At a religious conference in Qinghai in September 2021, authorities issued instructions that Tibetan Buddhist monasteries and study centers had to begin translating classroom texts from Tibetan into Mandarin Chinese, China’s “common language.”
Monks and nuns were told that they must learn and speak to each other in Chinese instead of their native language, part of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s call to Sinicize religion across the country.
https://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/gendun-lhundrub-05242022150507.html
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