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Report: Tibetan woman, student set selves on fire

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[March 05, 2012]  BEIJING (AP) -- A young mother and a student have set themselves on fire in the latest such protest against Chinese rule in Tibetan areas, a U.S. broadcaster said Monday.

HardwareU.S. government-backed Radio Free Asia said the 32-year-old mother and the female student died after separately immolating in different provinces over the weekend.

More than 20 Tibetans have set themselves on fire in the last year to protest what they say are harsh Chinese policies that do not allow them to freely practice their religion.

The reported deaths came on the eve of the opening of China's annual legislative session, a time when security is tightened across the country. March is also a sensitive time for Tibet, marking several anniversaries, including that of the unsuccessful revolt against China that caused Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama to flee in 1959, and deadly anti-government riots that rocked the Tibetan capital Lhasa in 2008.

The student set herself ablaze Saturday at a vegetable market in Gansu province's Maqu county and died at the scene, the report said, without giving the girl's name or age.

Chinese market vendors threw stones at the girl's burning body, the broadcaster said, citing an unidentified Tibetan exile with connections to the community in Maqu. It didn't say why they attacked her. Calls to local Maqu schools rang unanswered.

The London-based group Free Tibet said Monday the student was Tsering Kyi, 20. She had been in her hometown just days before she set herself on fire, it said.

The group quotes her as saying during her visit home that Tibetans were burning themselves in Aba, a town under lockdown by Chinese authorities, and other areas. "We should do something for Tibet -- life is meaningless if we don't do something for Tibet," the group said in a press release, though it did not cite a source for the remark.

After setting herself alight at the market, the student raised her hand above her head in a fist several times, Free Tibet said.

On Sunday, a woman identified only as Rinchen set herself on fire in front of a police station by the main gate to the Kirti Monastery in Aba prefecture in Sichuan province. Radio Free Asia said she was a mother of three young children. Free Tibet said Rinchen had four children.

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Radio Free Asia reported that Rinchen called for the Dalai Lama to return to Tibet and freedom for Tibet as she set herself alight, quoting an exiled Tibetan monk in India, Kanyak Tsering.

Tibetan areas are mostly off-limits to foreign media and it was not possible to immediately confirm the claims.

A woman who answered the phone at the local Communist Party propaganda office in Aba declined to comment or give her name and referred calls to provincial authorities, who could not immediately be reached. A police official in Maqu said she was unaware of the report involving the student and hung up.

Free Tibet director Stephanie Brigden said Rinchen's self-immolation was the result of repression and attempts to assimilate Tibetans into Han Chinese culture.

"Tibetans are living under de facto martial law. China's response to protests -- which are increasingly widespread -- has been to intensify repression and surveillance, pushing Tibet deeper into crisis," she said in a statement.

China says it treats minority groups such as Tibetans fairly, and pours tens of billions of dollars into improving living conditions in their areas. The government has also accused the Dalai Lama and overseas Tibetans of being behind the protests and self-immolations.

[Associated Press; By ALEXA OLESEN]

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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