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Tibetans protest in Paris against China killing of tour guide

“He refused to hoist the Chinese national flag on the roof of his house.”

• February 25, 2021

The Tibetan community held a demonstration in Paris on Thursday protesting against the torture of a Tibetan tour guide in a Chinese prison, which led to his death on February 6, 2021.

Kunchok Jinpa, a 51-year-old tour guide, had died on February 6 in prison in China, reported to have died after suffering a brain haemorrhage due to torture for around eight years.

Citing local sources, Radio Free Asia said that Kunchok Jinpa was a resident of Driru county in Tibet’s Nagchu municipality.

Mr. Jinpa had vanished in custody after being detained on November 8, 2013, and died three months after being admitted to hospital suffering from paralysis and a brain haemorrhage.

He lived and studied in exile in India in 1989 and returned to Tibet in 1998 to work as a tour guide.

Speaking to RFA, his close friend in Tibet said, “He refused to hoist the Chinese national flag on the roof of his house.”

Since Mr. Jinpa had once lived in India, he was “aware of many things” and had often helped and guided Tibetans wanting to go there, the friend added.

“Kunchok Jinpa’s death in the hands of China is a clear picture of the cost of disclosing true information from inside Tibet to the outside world,” said Yarthar, a former Driru resident now living in India.

During the protest, the students of Free Tibet also called for freeing Tibet from Chinese occupation.

“Kunchok Jinpa’s death is yet another grim case of a wrongfully imprisoned Tibetan dying from mistreatment,” said Sophie Richardson, New York-based Human Rights Watch China director.

“Chinese authorities responsible for arbitrary detention, torture or ill-treatment and the death of people in their custody should be held accountable,” Mr. Richardson added.

“This is just the latest case of a Tibetan dying after being imprisoned for daring to defy the occupying Chinese government,” added John Jones, Campaigns Manager at London-based Free Tibet, in a February 17 statement.

On January 31, a similar protest was held outside the Chinese embassy in Paris to protest the death of Tibetan monk, Tenzin Nyima, who died of injuries sustained from beatings and torture in a Chinese prison.

The 19-year-old monk died of injuries sustained from beatings and “torture” in a Chinese prison in Sichuan’s Kardze prefecture after being released in a comatose state by his jailers, Radio Free Asia reported.

The monk was from Dza Wonpo monastery, in Wonpo township, Kandze prefecture, a Tibetan area within Sichuan province.

The authorities initially detained him on November 9, 2019, two days after he and three other Wonpo monks briefly distributed leaflets and shouted slogans calling for Tibetan independence outside the local Wonpo government office. 

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