Thursday, September 11, 2008

Nepal says to deport illegal Tibetans back to Tibet

Photo
A Tibetan protester shouts anti-China slogans from a police van near the Chinese consular office in Kathmandu September 10, 2008.





Photo
Police arrest Tibetan protesters near the Chinese consular office in Kathmandu September 11, 2008.


A Tibetan protester shouts from a police van near the Chinese consular office in Kathmandu September 11, 2008.

Thu Sep 11, 2008 10:35am EDT

By Gopal Sharma

KATHMANDU (Reuters) - Nepal's Maoist-led government will deport Tibetan exiles living illegally in the country, an official said on Thursday, a move likely aimed at stopping regular protests against its influential neighbor China.

More than 20,000 Tibetans live in Nepal. Thousands fled Tibet after a failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959.

Those early arrivals were given refugee status in Nepal. But new exiles from Tibet cannot stay in Nepal, which hands them over to the U.N. refugee agency for their onward journey to India, where their spiritual leader the Dalai Lama lives.

Now, Nepal wants to deport all Tibetans without either official refugee status or U.N. documents back to Tibet, where they could face action by Chinese authorities.

Tibetans are not allowed to organize any anti-China activities in Nepal, but in recent months they have staged near-daily demonstrations in Kathmandu against the Chinese crackdown on protests in Tibet in March.

The new Nepal move is seen as an attempt to discourage the exiles from organizing anti-China protests.

Home Ministry Spokesman Modraj Dotel said police had detained 106 Tibetans to see if they had necessary papers to establish their refugee status.

"If they have the status they will be allowed to stay," Dotel said. "Otherwise, they have to leave the country."

Dotel said the verification of papers was being done with the help of the United Nations refugee agency.

Kathmandu considers Tibet as part of China, which appears to be unhappy with the way Nepali authorities were handling the protests. In recent months, more than 10,000 Tibetans were detained during the protests but were freed within a day or two.

Beijing has been pressing Nepal to do more to stop the protests, mainly staged outside a Chinese consular office in Kathmandu.

Nepal's new leader, Maoist Prime Minister Prachanda visited China in August, when he met Chinese President Hu Jintao and reaffirmed Nepal's one-China policy.

(Editing by Krittivas Mukherjee and Paul Tait)

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