China strengthens Tibet frontier to deter unrest

China has beefed up security forces guarding Tibet's mountain frontier with south Asia, a senior police officer told state media…

China has beefed up security forces guarding Tibet's mountain frontier with south Asia, a senior police officer told state media, vowing the controls will help prevent unrest as the region enters a sensitive month.

Fu Hongyu, Communist Party commissar of the Ministry of Public Security's Border Control Department, told Xinhua news agency today that the extra security would "fully protect the stability of Tibet's frontier region".

"To address stability protection in Tibet, we have deployed troops to strengthen controls along the Tibetan (international) frontier at points of entry and on key sectors and roads," said Fu.

A senior Tibetan official had earlier denied the government there had taken big new security steps.

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China shares a border in the Himalayan region with India, Nepal, Bhutan and Myanmar. For many years Tibetans have crossed back and forth, some with official approval and some to study in Buddhist monasteries run by exiled monks.

Fu's comments were another official warning against groups that may seek to use this month to show discontent with Chinese rule in Tibet, 50 years after the region's Buddhist leader, the Dalai Lama, fled across the mountain border into north India after a failed insurrection against Chinese rule.

The anniversary of the Dalai Lama's flight falls tomorrow.

A year ago, monk-led protests against Chinese rule in Tibet's regional capital, Lhasa, gave way to rioting on March 14 when a Tibetan crowd attacked shops run by Han Chinese and Hui Muslims, killing 19 people. The unrest and subsequent security crackdown spread across Tibetan areas.

Groups abroad demanding Tibetan self-rule have said more than 200 Tibetans may have died in region-wide clashes. Chinese officials have rejected these claims and said they used minimal force.

A German newspaper, the Frankfurter Rundschau, on Friday quoted the Dalai Lama as saying Tibet was very tense and that there could be "an explosion of violence" at any time.

China says that the Dalai Lama's "clique" instigated the unrest last year and it calls him a separatist using religion to press for an independent Tibet. But the 73-year-old monk says he opposes violence and wants only high-level autonomy, under Chinese sovereignty, for his homeland.

Tibet's governor, Qiangba Puncog, said last week he did not expect any major disturbances during the anniversaries and denied authorities had significantly boosted security forces.

Senior police officers across China, including Tibet, will receive training over coming months in handling unrest to avoid spiraling confrontation, state media have reported.

"The struggle against separatism confronting our region remains extremely grim and the task of ensuring development and stability in Tibet remains a heavy burden," the region's Communist Party secretary, Zhang Qingli, told police there in early March, the  Tibet Daily reported last week.

Reuters