Beijing, October 27: Two Tibetans have been put to death for their roles in deadly protests last year, the first known executions for the violence, an overseas monitoring group said Tuesday.
Lobsang Gyaltsen and Loyak, who goes by one name, were sentenced to death in April on charges relating to “starting fatal fires,” according to the International Campaign for Tibet, a Washington-based advocacy group.
The group said the Tibetans were executed in the regional capital of Lhasa but did not say when. Other Tibetan rights groups have said the executions were carried out last Tuesday.
Tibetans attacked Chinese migrants and shops in the regional capital of Lhasa in anti-government riots in March 2008 and torched parts of the city’s commercial district.
Chinese officials say 22 people died, but Tibetans say many times that number were killed. The violence in Lhasa and protests in Tibetan communities across western China were the most sustained unrest since the late 1980s.
According to New York-based Human Rights Watch, authorities have made thousands of arbitrary arrests, and more than 100 trials have gone through the judicial system over the Tibetan unrest.
Lobsang Gyaltsen was sentenced to death for setting fire to two garment shops in downtown Lhasa on March 14 that killed a shop owner, according to a spokesman for the Lhasa Municipal Intermediate People’s Court, cited by the official Xinhua News Agency in April.
Loyak received the death penalty for setting fire to a motorcycle dealership in Dechen township in Lhasa’s Dagze county on March 15 last year, which led to the deaths of five people, Xinhua said. Many Tibetans only go by one name.
The court spokesman said the two defendants who were sentenced to death have committed very serious crimes, and only their executions can appease the anger of the public, according to the April 9 report by Xinhua. The article did not give the spokesman’s name.
China says Tibet has historically been part of its territory since the mid-13th century, and the Communist Party has governed the Himalayan region since Communist troops arrived there in 1951. Many Tibetans say they were effectively independent for most of their history.
Eighty people were sentenced following quick trials after the riots, but the government has never given a complete accounting and details of punishments continue to trickle out.
Officials at Lhasa’s public security bureau and People’s Court have repeatedly said they have no information on the executions.
British Foreign Office Minister Ivan Lewis condemned the executions in a statement Friday.
“We respect China’s right to bring those responsible for the violence in Tibet last year to justice. But the U.K. opposes the death penalty in all circumstances, and we have consistently raised our concerns about lack of due process in these cases in particular,” he said.
Lewis also called on China to urgently review the cases of others sentenced to death.
—Agencies