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Nepal breaks up Tibetans' rally
Nepalese police have arrested at least 1,100 Tibetans protesting near Chinese embassy buildings in Kathmandu, in advance of the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics.
Protesters shouted anti-Chinese slogans on Friday and tried to break through a police cordon outside the Chinese visa and trade section before being hauled away in police vans.
The Tibetans, including scores of monks and nuns, shouted "Shame shame, Hu Jintao", referring to the Chinese president, and "Tibet belongs to Tibetans," as they were rounded up.
More arrests were expected as organisers said they would try to keep up their protests throughout the day.
"The Tibetans continue to try and protest in small groups and as long as they keep coming we will detain them," a senior police officer said.
"The total number of detainees has reached 1,100. They are being held at various police stations and will be released later on Friday."
Some protesters scuffled with police, who kicked and hit the Tibetans with bamboo poles as they tried to break through the police cordon.
Other protesters shaved their heads and painted their faces and scalps with the flag of the Tibetan government-in-exile. They also wore headbands calling for a "Free Tibet".
Highest alert
Authorities in China are on their highest alert in the final hours before the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics, guarding against anyone who might try to take the shine off the curtain raiser that would be watched worldwide.
Tiananmen Square was sealed off. Many foreigners who were detained after protesting have been deported, and Chinese who did the same were in custody.
In Hong Kong, a British man was arrested on Friday after climbing on to the city's largest bridge and unfurling two protest banners.
Matt Pearce, 33, climbed on to a narrow girder in the centre of the bridge wearing a horse costume - alluding to the Olympic equestrian events being held in Hong Kong - and carrying a guitar, a witness said.
The large red banners read: "The People of China want freedom from oppression" and "We want human rights and
democracy."
Police closed the bridge to traffic and set up a giant inflatable safety mattress beneath the girder before climbing after Pearce and arresting him.
Hong Kong enjoys much greater freedoms than mainland China, including the right to protest.
However, three prominent Chinese activists were blocked from entering Hong Kong on Wednesday amid a tightening of the city's immigration and security measures days before Olympic equestrian events.
Protests set to coincide with the opening ceremony of the Beijing games are due to take place in London, Paris and Berlin. Rallies were held in Australia and planned in the Philippines and India.
Exiled Tibetans have been protesting virtually daily after deadly unrest erupted against Chinese rule in the Himalayan region in March.
On Thursday, around 600 Tibetans were arrested in Kathmandu, several hours after 1,500 monks, nuns and supporters who had been praying and chanting mantras refused to disperse.
Nepalese officials have repeatedly said no anti-China activity will be allowed as they seek to preserve friendly ties with their giant northern neighbour.
The country is home to about 20,000 exiled Tibetans who began arriving in large numbers in 1959 after the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader, fled Tibet following a failed uprising against the Chinese. Nepalese police have arrested at least 1,100 Tibetans protesting near Chinese embassy buildings in Kathmandu, in advance of the openin... more -
400 Tibetan protesters detained in Kathmandu
More than 400 Tibetan exiles have been detained in the Nepalese capital following a protest outside the Chinese Embassy office, police said Friday.
Despite a ban on demonstrations in the area, police official Ramesh Thapa said protesters tried to storm the visa office in Kathmandu but were held back by police. He said some were shouting anti-China slogans.
On Thursday, a protest in Kathmandu attended by about 2,000 Tibetans, including monks, nuns and school children, was disbanded by police. Protesters said they were demanding religious rights, and that China should shouldn't be allowed to host the Olympic Games while it continues to dominate their homeland.
Scuffles broke out when protesters hurled rocks and bricks at police, who fought back with bamboo batons.
A similar rally was held in the Indian capital of New Delhi, where armed paramilitary forces were stationed at roadblocks around the Chinese Embassy.
"There is no human rights, no justice and no freedom inside Tibet," said Konchok Yangphel of the Tibetan Youth Congress.
The protesters, who numbered several thousand, said China's rule of Tibet violates the Olympic spirit.
Elsewhere, a British man was taken away by police after unfurling banners that denounced China's human rights record on a major bridge in Hong Kong ahead of the Beijing Olympics' opening ceremony Friday.
Other protesters critical of China's human rights record were expected to demonstrate later in the day near the venue of the Olympic equestrian event in Hong Kong.
Matt Pearce, a longtime Hong Kong resident from Bristol, England, hung two banners on road signs on Hong Kong's Tsing Ma Bridge that said, "We want human rights and democracy" and "The people of China want freedom from oppression."
Officials shut down traffic on the bridge's upper deck where Pearce was protesting.
TV footage showed Pearce wearing a mask of a horse's head and a white shirt bearing the Olympic rings while carrying a guitar. His protest ended after about an hour when men in plainclothes hustled him away.
Protests against China's human rights record and its policy in Tibet have been staged around the globe in the run-up to the Beijing Summer Olympics, which kick off Friday.
Some have accused China of backsliding on human rights since it was awarded the Games, citing continued repression in Tibet following a violent crackdown on dissents in March.
As the Olympic torch made its way through Beijing on Wednesday, two British and two American protesters were detained after unfurling a banner calling for a free Tibet. More than 400 Tibetan exiles have been detained in the Nepalese capital following a protest outside the Chinese Embassy office, police... more -
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Nepalese Clash With Police
Nepalese demonstrators demanding King Gyanendra immediately quits the royal palace clashed with police in the capital, Kathmandu, a day after lawmakers declared the country a republic and abolished the 240-year-old Shah dynasty.
At least 10 people were injured when police wielding bamboo sticks beat stone-throwing protesters trying to break a security cordon around Narayanhiti palace yesterday. The government said it will notify the king that he has 15 days to move out.
Nepal's newly elected parliament voted May 28 to scrap the monarchy, the key demand of the former rebel CPN (Maoist) group which staged a 10-year insurgency that ended with a peace accord in 2006. The Maoists won most seats in last month's general elections.
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