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Tourist Blackout Of Tibet To Continue Print E-mail

APRIL 2008: Tourists may not be allowed into Tibet until after Olympics
International Campaign for Tibet has reported that Chinese authorities have postponed the re-opening of the Tibetan Autonomous Region (TAR) for tourism.

It had previously been announced by Chinese officials that the TAR would open again for tourism on May 1, but according to reliable reports it seems that re-opening may now not be until after the Olympics.

This is likely to be due to concerns over bringing the torch through Tibet and in an attempt to keep the extent of the crackdown hidden from the outside world.

The Chinese authorities have slowed down visa procedures and stopped issuing multiple entry visas to China from Hong Kong, a major gateway for travel into China, according to travel agencies.

TAR Party chairman Jampa Phuntsog said today at a news conference in Beijing that if there are any “problems” during the Olympic torch relay from Tibetans, “We will without doubt deal with these persons severely…we will not be merciful.”

The TAR has been closed to domestic and foreign tourists since March 16, after protests began on March 10 in Lhasa, following by a riot on March 14. Zhanor, deputy director of the TAR’s tourism bureau, had said that organized tours and independent travelers could return to Tibet on May 1, according to China Daily, an official English-language newspaper. This is no longer the case, according to ICT sources, following an emergency meeting among tourism officials in Lhasa.

The postponement of the re-opening of the TAR indicates that it does not want outside witnesses to the current crackdown in Tibet.

The Chinese authorities are now only issuing single- or double-entry travel visas to foreigners in Hong Kong, according to information from travel agencies, scaling back a visa program that used to issue multiple-entry business visas that lasted up to three years. Travel agents in Hong Kong told journalists that the restrictions on the multiple-entry visas were a result of China’s concern over attacks on China’s human rights record because of the crackdown in Tibet, and also following the disruption of the Olympic torch relay in Paris and London in the past few days. Chinese officials may have ordered the restrictions to keep tighter watch on tourists before the Olympics, some of the travel agents said, according to a report published today by the Associated Press. Hong Kong-based travel agent Forever Bright Trading Ltd. said on its Web site that multiple-entry visas were suspended from March 28 until October 17.

 

About the ATC

ImageAustralia Tibet Council (ATC) works to promote the human rights and democratic freedoms of the Tibetan people. ATC is an independent, non-profit Australian organisation funded solely by members and supporters.

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