SUB - COMMISSION ON PREVENTION OF DISCRIMINATION
AND PROTECTION OF MINORITIE
48th Session
5-30 August 1996
Item 18 of the provisional agenda
Written statement submitted by Transnational Radical Party
Human Rights Dimension of Population Transfer in Tibet
1. The Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities
by its resolution 1992/28 of 27 August 1992 entrusted Mr Awn Shawkat Al-Khasawnch
and Mr Ribot Hatano to prepare a preliminary study on the human rights dimension
of population transfer. And, by its resolution 1993/34 of 25 August 1993, the
sub-Commission endorsed the conclusions and recommendations of this study (E/CN.4/Sub2/1993/17),
which found inter alia, that "population transfer is, prima facie, unlawful and
violates a number of rights affirmed in human rights and humanitarian law for
both transferred and receiving populations".
2. In the progress report (E/CN.4/Sub.2/1994/18) submitted to the 46th session
of the Sub-Commission Mr Al-Khasawneh, in one of the conclusion said: "in circumstances
when the purpose or method of transfer constitutes genocide, slavery, racial or
systematic discrimination and torture, the transfer may qualify as a crime within
the meaning of article 19 (part I)
of the International Law Commission's draft articles on State responsibility and
carry all the consequences for internationally wrongful acts and, in addition,
those normally associated with crimes. Within this purview acts such as "ethnic
cleansing" dispersal of minorities or ethnic population from their homeland within
the State, and the implantation of settlers amounting to the denials of self-determination".
3. Transnational Radical Party has been raising the human rights situation in
Tibet where the human dimensions of the population transfer are alarming. The
massive settlement of Chinese settlers all over Tibet now poses a direct threat
to the very survival of the religious, cultural and national identity of the Tibetan
people. At the fiftieth session of the U.N. Commission on Human rights, Mr Abdelfattah
Amor, the Special Rapporteur on Religious Intolerance after a visit to Lhasa in
November 1994, warned in his report (E/CN.4/1995/91), about the threats to the
preservation and practice of Tibetan Buddhism because of the on-going demographic
changes in Tibet.
4. During the last more than four decades, the move of Chinese settlers into the
Tibet remained an important Chinese policy to undermine the Tibetan population.
Chinese leaders from Mao Zedong to Deng Xiaoping to Jiang Zemin have openly called
for the implantation of Chinese settlements in Tibet. In 1952 Mao Zedong proposed
a five-fold increase in the population of the "Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR)"
saying: "Tibet covers a large area but is thinly population. Its population should
be increased from the present two or three million to five or six, and then to
over ten million".(1)
5. In 1985 the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi announced its government's intention
to "address the imbalance between the vast untapped mineral wealth and thin population"
not just of Tibet but including "other sparsely populated outlying regions". Chinese
settlements should be "welcomed by the local population, and should result in
a population increase of sixty million over the next thirty years in those regions".
This, the announcement went on to say, "is a very conservative estimate. As a
matter of fact, the increase might swell to a hundred million in less than thirty
years".(2)
6. An official Chinese document, Population of China: A Survey of Qinghai, reported
in 1989 that for 36 years, from 1954 to 1989, Qinghai
province (formerly Amdo, the north-eastern province of Tibet) received
11,167,110 immigrants from other provinces of China. This meant an average increase
of 36,472 immigrants per year during the above period, the publication observed.(3)
Since there was no compulsion for people from "TAR" and Inner Mongolia to migrate
to Qinghai, one can safely say that all these immigrants came from China. The
settlers included cadres, university graduates, scientists, technicians, industrial
and mining workers, agriculturalists for state farms , military personnel and
former prisoners. Most of them came from Shanghai, Beijing, Tianjin, Shandong,
Hunan, Shananxi and Sichhuan. They were settled all over Quinghai such as Xinning,
Tsoshar (Haidong), Tsonub (Haixi), Tsojang (Haibei) and Tsolbo (Hainan).
7. For example, in early 1950s, Gormo region of "Haixi Mongolian-Tibetan autonomous
prefecture" had only scattered population of Tibet and Mongolian nomads. A Survey
of Quinghai province states that by 1982 it population was more than 120,000 of
which the percentage of Tibetans was 4,1% Mongolians 2,9% and Chinese 87,7%. In
Gyago township near Tsoed monastery, there were 30 families of Chinese and Muslim
traders in 1949. Now there are more than 30,000 people, 90% of the total population
being Chinese settlers who occupy all the offices, factories and shops in this
new town.
8. Massive population transfer does not only inflict a demographic assault on
the local population but it also bring along a devastating impact on the environment
in north-eastern Tibet. The "Quinghai Daily" newspaper recently damaged state-owned
mining areas, added to soil erosion along major rivers and pushed some rare animal
species, like the snow leopard and white-lipped deer, toward extinction.(4)
9. If we look into the demographic situation of Takster, the birth place of the
Dalai Lama. There are about 50 families in the village. All of them claimed to
be Tibetans. But only two of them spoke Tibetan, according to a recent visitor.
There was one school, where only Chinese was taught. There wasn't a single Tibetan
teacher in that school. On numerous occasions, the local people had requested
that a Tibetan language teacher be sent to the school. But the authorities have
not fulfilled their wishes so far. There are many such cases in Tibet.(5)
10. China's official population transfer is continuing in Tibet. What happened
in north-eastern and south eastern Tibet is now happening in central Tibet, particularly
in the so-called "Tibet Autonomous Region". The Chinese settlers already hugely
outnumber the local Tibetan population in major "TAR" cities and towns like Lhasa,
Lhokha, Tsethang, Shigatse, Dromo, Nagchu, Bayi and Nyingtri. The profile of Chinese
now moving to central Tibet clearly divide into two types. One group is connected
to the Chinese government's aims and objectives: officials, miners, factory hands
and soldiers with their families. The other type of Chinese settlers in the region
are poor unemployed Chinese in search of a better living who also benefits protection
of the authorities.
11. One official Chinese publication (6) put the number of Chinese settlers in
"TAR" from 1965 to 1973 at 121,900 or "an average of 14,300 people per year".
The publication goes on to state that in 1965, after the establishment of the
"TAR", Beijing started large-scale economic developments in Tibet. "In the industrial
sector, particularly, many factories were built and mines dug. To fill the vacancies
for workers needed to run these economic enterprises, thousands of Chinese scientists,
administrators and skilled and semi-skilled workers and their extended families
came to Tibet every year. In addition, a large number of educated youth joined
the efforts to develop Tibet," the publication added. On 24 April 1991, Tibet
Daily article referred to a total of more than 200,000 Chinese immigrants who
have arrived central Tibet from 29 different Chinese cities and autonomous regions.
12. Even if we were to accept the above figure, spouses and children of the official
"Residential Permit Card" that must be carried by heads of civilian households
crossing China's internal border. In the June 1994 issue of Chian Shou (Frontline),
a Chinese-language Taiwanese journal, there was an article by Lou Ping. The article,
entitled "China Using People's Liberation Army (PLA) to Colonize Tibet" states
that although the Chinese constitution stipulates that discharged soldiers must
return to their areas of origin, at the end of 1993, the Chinese Central Military
Committee decided secretly that beginning in 1994, PLA soldiers being posted in
the "TAR" were to bring their official residential cards with them. The main objective
of this secret plan, according to Lou Ping is to settle these soldiers in Tibet
once their duty is over.
13. All these trends show that Tibetans are slowly becoming a minority in their
own country and the Chinese authorities who seems to be the least bothered about
this, instead encourage more and more Chinese to move and settle all over Tibet.
The Chinese policy of population transfer may be about to achieve what repression
and military might have failed to do during the past four decades. If demographic
aggression against Tibet continues at this rate, to will not be long before the
Tibetans are rendered a tiny and insignificant minority in their own homeland.
By then, Tibetans as a distinct people and civilization will be lost to this world.
It is in view of this grave threat that many people have termed the Chinese policy
of population transfer "China's Final Solution to the issue of Tibet". The Dalai
Lama, the Tibetan leader has called this Chinese policy as committing "ethnic
genocide" against the Tibetan people.
14. Transnational Radical Party believes that the Chinese authorities as the "occupying
Power" is violating Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 in Tibet,
by transferring millions of "its own population into the territory it occupies".
In conclusion, we call upon the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination
and Protection of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities to take note of
the seriousness of the situation of population transfer in Tibet.
(1) Renmin Ribao (People's Daily), 22 November 1952. The newspaper is the official
Chinese newspaper.
(2) Movement Westward, Reference Material No 2, Embassy of the People's Republic
of China, New Delhi, 4 February 1985.
(3) The population of Zuango: A Survey of Qinghai (Chinese), published jointly
by the Culture and Education Bureau, the State Council and the Population Survey
Bureau, 1989, p. 177.
(4) In Rural China, 'Gold Lords' Challenge the State, Patrick E. Tyler, International
Herald Tribune, 20 July 1995.
(5) Population Transfer as an official Chinese Policy, statement of Tenzin Palbar,
Tibet Hearing, Foreign Affairs Committee, German Parliament, 19 June 1995.
(6) Population of China: A Survey of the Tibet Autonomous Region.
(7) Skilled immigrants of different nationalities contribute to the development
of Tibet".