ICT Publications

Major ICT Publications

17 June, 2010

In 2009, the situation for Tibetans deteriorated further in Nepal as the Chinese sought to block protests about repression in Tibet. Border security was still tight following the crackdown in Tibet as a result of unrest that swept the plateau from March, 2008, and numbers of Tibetans escaping into exile were low compared to previous years although higher than in 2008. »continue

18 May, 2010

There has been a vibrant literary and cultural resurgence in Tibet since Spring 2008 when protests against government policy and in support of the Dalai Lama swept across the plateau. Writers, using print and the internet, who are often fluent in Chinese as well as Tibetan, in Xining and other areas of Amdo (now part of Qinghai province) have been at the forefront. »continue

Tibet Briefs

Dalai Lama and President Obama at the White House
20 April, 2010

1. Meeting between President Obama and the Dalai Lama
2. 10 March statement by the Dalai Lama
3. Summary of recent protests in Eastern Tibet
4. Polish NGO raises case of Panchen Lama at the UN
5. Visit of the European Economic and Social Committee to Dharamsala
6. National and European Parliamentary Initiatives on Tibet

Gyari Gyaltsen

1. 9th round of Sino-Tibetan dialogue
2. Top-level meeting in Beijing sets strategy on Tibet
3. President Obama to meet Dalai Lama
4. China Jails Tibetan Filmmaker Dhondup Wangchen for 6 Years

Tibet Press Watch

Tibet Press Watch Summer 2010

Earthquake in Yushu: Tragedy in the Heart of Tibet

Tibet Press Watch Spring 2010

The Dalai Lama Presents the Light of Truth Awards

Inside Tibet Reports

A new set of images received by ICT depicts a group of Chinese police at the scene of the shooting of the young Tibetan nun on the Nangpa Pass near the border of Nepal on September 30. »continue

At least ten young children from the group of Tibetans who came under fire near the Tibetan border with Nepal on September 30 have been taken into Chinese custody, according to new eyewitness accounts from climbers on Mount Cho Oyu at the time. »continue