KATMANDU, Nepal, June 7, 2008

Hundreds Of Tibet Protestors Held In Nepal

Police In Katmandu Detain At Least 450 Marching Against Chinese Crackdown

    • Police in Nepal's capital broke up a march by Tibetan exiles and detained hundreds of protestors in Katmandu, Nepal, June 7, 2008.

      Police in Nepal's capital broke up a march by Tibetan exiles and detained hundreds of protestors in Katmandu, Nepal, June 7, 2008.  (AP Photo/Binod Joshi)

    • Tibetan exile protestors shout slogans from inside a police van after they were detained in Katmandu, Nepal, June, 7, 2008.

      Tibetan exile protestors shout slogans from inside a police van after they were detained in Katmandu, Nepal, June, 7, 2008.  (AP Photo/Binod Joshi)

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    A look at recent unrest in Tibet and western China and some of the history behind it.

(AP)  Police in Nepal's capital broke up a protest Saturday by hundreds of Tibetan exiles against Chinese rule in their homeland, detaining many of them, officials said.

The protesters marched about three miles in the heart of Katmandu before police in riot gear blocked them. Police used bamboo batons to beat some and detained at least 450, police official R.P. Dhamala said at the scene.

Scuffles between police and protesters left many with minor injuries.

Many of the protesters were Buddhist nuns and monks.

"Stop killing in Tibet, we want freedom," the protesters chanted as they marched through the narrow streets of Katmandu.

Once they reached the main roads, police blocked them, and when they tried to break through the police lines they were detained and taken away in vans and trucks.

Officials say they cannot allow protests against friendly nations such as China.

Tibetans in Nepal began protests against China's crackdown in their homeland in March but temporarily halted them last month after the Tibetan government-in-exile based in India asked them to stop because of the major earthquake in China. They resumed protests this past week.

Detained protesters are generally freed later in the day.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Add a Comment
by sistatee-2009 June 8, 2008 11:53 AM EDT
The Dalai Lama was unavailable for comment except to say, "Big Brown...you a clown! You let me down!"
Reply to this comment
by koipra June 7, 2008 9:12 PM EDT
We are already in a big political trouble in ourselves. We have given them shelters; as you know there are tens of thousands of Tibetan refugees in Nepal living there since the chinese cultural revolution. All we want them is to show civility and live in peace. My comment is in no way to endorse the action taken by police, but I think its important to recognize and respect the law and order of another country where they are living in refuge. In the meantime the Nepalese government cannot dare to p*** off the Chinese by allowing those demonstrations going on in Kathmandu streets...so they have some sorts of compulsions too.
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by haoli25 June 7, 2008 8:51 PM EDT
Is this another example of Nepal pinching?
Reply to this comment
by randynason June 7, 2008 8:38 PM EDT
I see the Olmpic Committee is gearing up to impress their national neighbors with a show of "political solidarity."
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