Chinese authorities have taken online action in an effort to suppress the protests against Chinese rule in Tibet according to United Press International. Chinese authorities blocked access to YouTube and other sites, stopping web-users from seeing video footage of the demonstrations.
No such videos have appeared on the China-based, video sharing site youku.com. (Afraid my Chinese isn't good enough to verify this).
Showing posts with label Tibet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tibet. Show all posts
Monday, 17 March 2008
Friday, 14 March 2008
Reporting Tibet
Protests in Tibet have escalated today triggering the largest demonstrations in the province for decades. According to the BBC and Reuters, protesters have been burning cars and shops in Lhasa. (Even the Chinese news agency Xinhua acknowledges that something is happening.)
Unrest began earlier in the week after police arrested a number of Buddhist monks marching to mark the 49th anniversary of a Tibetan uprising against Chinese rule.
One BBC reporter I spoke to today, who is working on the story, admitted it was difficult to know exactly what was going on.
But he said that blogs, and people who had contacted the BBC's User Generated Content (UGC) department, were helping to build up a picture of events on the ground:
"UGC is coming up trumps on Tibet".
Yesterday, the BBC's World At One radio programme used information they had obtained from a blog written by a Western tourist.
What's on the blogs?
Unrest began earlier in the week after police arrested a number of Buddhist monks marching to mark the 49th anniversary of a Tibetan uprising against Chinese rule.
One BBC reporter I spoke to today, who is working on the story, admitted it was difficult to know exactly what was going on.
But he said that blogs, and people who had contacted the BBC's User Generated Content (UGC) department, were helping to build up a picture of events on the ground:
"UGC is coming up trumps on Tibet".
Yesterday, the BBC's World At One radio programme used information they had obtained from a blog written by a Western tourist.
What's on the blogs?
- One traveller wrote about his experience of the gathering on Barkhor Square on 10 March. His blog post also has a couple of images and a very short video, which has been running on BBC World Television today.
- A 'blond scientist' joined the march to Tibet from India and meets Tenzin Tsundue on the way.
- Another traveller twittered the (non)-coverage of the event on television in China, suggesting that the plug simply gets pulled when the BBC mentions the situation.
- A round up of unrest can be found at the Students for a Free Tibet blog.
- Some short extracts translated from Chinese blogs can be found here at Global Voices Online.
Update
- Unfortunate error in an article by MSNBC.com: "BEIJING - At least people were killed in rioting between Tibetans and Chinese security forces in Lhasa on Friday, according to a report." Hopefully someone will notice and amend it in due course.
Labels:
BBC,
BBC Blogging,
Tibet,
UGC