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New
reports on Ngaba prison

TIN
News Update / 27 April 2001
New
reports have reached TIN about conditions in Ngaba prison in Sichuan
province, highlighting the prison's increasing importance as a place
of detention for political prisoners. Fourteen Tibetan political
prisoners are currently being held in Ngaba prison in Maowun county
(Chinese: Maoxian) in Ngaba (Ch: Aba) Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous
Prefecture. Eleven of the 14 are monks, including three monks from
Kirti monastery in the prefecture, five monks from Kardze Gepheling
monastery in neighbouring Kardze (Ch: Ganzi) Tibetan Autonomous
Prefecture, one monk from Lithang and a Tibetan lama who was sentenced
to six years after expressing his opposition to local government
policies linked to gold mining near his monastery. A reliable report
indicates that Sonam Phuntsog, the senior religious teacher and
scholar whose detention sparked off major demonstrations in Kardze
in October 1999, is also being held in Ngaba prison, serving five
years.
The Tibetan political prisoners currently held at Ngaba prison were
detained at various stages during the 1990s and are serving sentences
of between three and ten years for political activities including
the distribution of pro-independence leaflets and putting up the
Tibetan flag. According to a former prisoner, the Kardze monks imprisoned
in Ngaba were detained in 1998 for "putting up Free Tibet posters
or shouting for Free Tibet". One of the most well-known political
detainees in Ngaba prison, Kabukye Rinpoche, head of Nubzur monastery
in Serthar (Ch: Seda) county in Kardze, was arrested on 10 June
1996 after he wrote a letter to the authorities protesting against
the exploitation of a gold mine near his monastery and the influx
of Chinese migrants that had occurred as a result. Kabukye Rinpoche
is highly respected as a scholar and spiritual leader among the
Nubzur monks and the local community, and his arrest five years
ago caused widespread anger among Tibetans. At the time, Kabukye
Rinpoche reportedly sent a message to the people of Serthar saying
that all he had done was to put on paper some of his thoughts, and
he urged them to remain calm.
Sonam Phuntsog, a well-known scholar and Tibetan language teacher
in his forties, is also believed to be imprisoned in Ngaba. His
arrest appears to have been linked to the authorities' concern over
his influence in the area and his apparent loyalty to the Dalai
Lama. Following Sonam Phuntsog's initial detention on 24 October
1999, hundreds of people took to the streets in Kardze town to demand
his release, and the authorities' fears of further unrest may have
led them to carry out Sonam Phuntsog's trial and sentencing away
from his home county, Kardze. Reports on where he is serving his
sentence have differed, but the most substantial account received
by TIN so far says that he has been transferred to Ngaba prison.
Other reports have suggested that he is held in Dartsedo (Ch: Kangding)
the capital of Kardze TAP. It is likely that Sonam Phuntsog would
have been held there at some point, either in connection with investigation
and court procedures, or in
transit to Ngaba prison.
Tibetan political prisoners from neighbouring Kardze county may
be being transferred to Ngaba Prison for security reasons. Kardze
TAP's main prison complex, at Xinduqiao (Tib: Minyag), is an older
facility and may not be considered as high security as Ngaba Prison.
The location of the Xinduqiao complex in an area where the majority
of the population is Tibetan, and adjacent to a main highway that
runs through much of Kardze TAP, would make it easier for family
members to visit imprisoned relatives. Maowun county, in contrast,
is home to almost no Tibetans (under one per cent) and is accessible
from Kardze TAP only by undertaking a return journey that would
be relatively expensive, potentially arduous, and take several days.
Conditions at Ngaba prison
A former political prisoner at Ngaba prison who is now in exile
reported that political prisoners were generally treated more severely
than criminal prisoners in Ngaba prison. He said that physical abuse,
including torture, was commonplace, that cells were overcrowded,
and that political prisoners were dispersed among criminal prisoners.
The former political prisoner told TIN: "One of the big problems
was that there was not enough food. Our families sent us butter,
meat and money, but the police kept these. If two people fought
and one was a political prisoner and the other was a thief, then
the political prisoner would be beaten, but not the thief. If we
were sick there was only one type of medicine given to prisoners,
for headaches, but this wasn't given to political prisoners. They
said, now you are sick, you can pray to the Dalai Lama and to America
to help > you." The former prisoner also claimed that political
prisoners were not permitted to receive visits from family members.
This may have been less a matter of the prison's policy than the
result of obstacles such as long, expensive journeys from remote
counties, or high "fees" demanded by prison officials.
The same former political prisoner said that he suffered maltreatment
during interrogation sessions, which continued throughout his imprisonment.
He also indicated that prisoners were supposed to speak only in
Chinese to prison staff, and that there were restrictions on speaking
Tibetan. He told TIN that if prison guards found religious materials
such as prayer beads, blessing cords or photos of the Dalai Lama,
they confiscated them and "stamped on them". When the
then US President Bill Clinton visited China in June 1998, prison
guards also taunted the political prisoners with comments that they
should hope for Bill Clinton to come and help them.
A second former political prisoner who was held in Ngaba prison
said that prisoners at Ngaba had to buy prison uniforms themselves,
and if they were found without a uniform, they would be beaten and
punished. The former prisoner, who is also now in exile, claimed
that Chinese prisoners received a special allowance for these uniforms
but that Tibetans did not. "Prices charged for buying anything
from the prison store were twice the market price," he told
TIN. The former detainee also reported that visitors to Tibetan
prisoners were charged a fee of a few yuan, which is a normal procedurein
Tibetan prisons.
The same Tibetan told TIN that many prisoners who are malnourished
and suffering from illness are still forced to carry out labour
duties. He cites symptoms of malnourishment such as loss of hair
pigmentation and pallor of the skin, and says: "As a consequence
their physical health deteriorates rapidly, and often the weaker
prisoners fall down unconscious." While this prisoner experienced
forced labour conditions, the other former prisoner reported that
he was kept confined to his cell-block and was not made to work.
One former prisoner explained that there were eight cells in his
block, each with 18 inmates, a description which accords closely
with photographs of the prison. In addition to the four main cell-
blocks, there are several other structures within the prison walls.
The largest are three factory-style buildings that do not reveal
outward signs of their function as sell-blocks. Photographs now
available for viewing on the Tibet website at: http://www.tibetinfo.net/reports/ngaba_prison/ngaba_prison.htm
show an overview of the entire prison and main outlying buildings,
with a close-up of the gate area and one section of the work area,
apparently for making cement-based construction materials. One photograph
shows the meeting area of the prison, which includes a raised platform
and a slogan on the wall: "Raise the sail of idealism; speed
towards the shores of a new life". Prison forced-labour enterprises,
such as construction companies and factories, often include the
term "new life" in their names. In addition to the main
cell-blocks there is also an area of the prison that appears to
be designed for punishment, including small isolation cells, with
higher security than the rest of the prison.
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