logo
China accused of ‘indoctrinating' Tibetan children from age of four with state-run boarding schools

China accused of ‘indoctrinating' Tibetan children from age of four with state-run boarding schools

Independent29-05-2025

Rights activists have accused Chinese authorities of indoctrinating Tibetan children and eroding their culture by forcing them to attend 'colonial' boarding schools.
The Tibet Action Institute, a movement advocating for Tibetan independence founded by Tibetan-Canadian activist Lhadon Tethong, published a new report on Thursday warning that schools are teaching children as young as four to be loyal to the Chinese Communist Party.
The activists estimate one million children in the Tibet Autonomous Region and Tibetan districts study at such boarding schools, though the number is difficult to confirm. The group has claimed that the schools are a smaller part of a broader strategy to dilute Tibetan identity and assimilate Tibetans into the majority Chinese culture, with the Xi Jinping-led government perceiving Tibetan identity as a 'threat'.
China has shuttered village schools across Tibet and replaced them with centralised boarding schools over the last dozen years, leaving parents with little choice but to send their children to such facilities. Many students come from remote farming villages and live at the schools full-time.
Through these boarding schools, the report warned, the Chinese government was trying 'to deracinate Tibetan children from their culture, language, and identity'.
The report found students were restricted from enrolling in Tibetan language classes or engaging in religious activities. Tibetans view the practice of their language as the fundamental guarantee of their future as a distinct people within the broader Chinese region.
The group said it documented numerous instances of negligence and abuse in Tibetan boarding schools.
"Tibetan children's lives are being irrevocably altered to serve the purposes of the Chinese government," the Tibet Action Institute said after conducting 15 in-depth interviews with Tibetans between 2023 and 2024.
It added: "The separation from family and deliberate reshaping of children's identity in boarding schools is causing emotional and psychological harm, including attachment trauma and alienation."
The report quotes a Tibetan who fled to India saying that "the indoctrination process begins from a very young age," when children are removed from their parents.
"Children cannot study Tibetan and Tibetan history. They are taught the Chinese language and the history of China written by Chinese writers," the interviewee was quoted as saying.
Another person alleged that the materials on classroom walls were in Chinese, including pictures of leaders such as Mr Xi, Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. "Xi Jinping Thought" is taught in classes as part of the curriculum, the person said.
"Essays and drawings were judged based on how much we were able to praise the Party, the state, and the army."
The group found that in 2022, a 13-year-old Tibetan girl with underlying medical conditions died after her family persistently tried to reach her with prescription medicine at her boarding school. The school first neglected to provide the medicine, and then failed to seek medical attention, it added.
China has long sought to eradicate any possibility of unrest in regions home to sizeable ethnic populations by imprisoning dissenters, reshaping societies and religions to align them with the views of the Communist party. The approach has hardened in the past decade under the leadership of Mr Xi, who has been accused of a brutal crackdown on the Uyghur community in the Xinjiang region north of Tibet.
The Chinese government has repeatedly denied allegations of human rights abuses in Tibet, as well as other regions like Xinjiang. Xu Zhitao, vice chair of the Tibet region's government, rejected similar criticism in 2023, arguing that China opened the boarding school system to improve education for children from remote areas.
'The claim that Tibetan children are forced to go to boarding schools is deliberate smearing with an ulterior motive,' he told reporters at the release of an official report on the Communist Party's policies in Tibet.
He said the curriculum at the schools included Tibetan language and culture. 'These are all implemented to effectively secure our Tibetan children's rights to access high-quality education, and it is an important expression of the development and progress of human rights in Tibet.'
The Chinese government and Tibet's government-in-exile offer competing versions of whether the remote, mountainous territory was historically ruled as part of China, or whether it has legitimate claims to independence or autonomy.
"A generation of Tibetan children is being harmed by China's colonial boarding school policy – socially, emotionally, and psychologically,' said Lhadon Tethong, the co-founder and director of Tibet Action Institute.
'The lifelong negative impact on each of these children and their families, and on the future health of Tibetan society overall, cannot be overstated. The international community must step up all efforts to urgently push the Chinese government to abolish this abusive and coercive system.'
In February 2023, a group of UN experts raised alarm over reports of Tibetan children being separated form their families. "We are alarmed by what appears to be a policy of forced assimilation of the Tibetan identity into the dominant Han-Chinese majority, through a series of oppressive actions against Tibetan educational, religious, and linguistic institutions," the UN experts said.
The rights group urged the UN and concerned governments to call on the Chinese government to conduct a public investigation into the alleged abuses, deaths, and mental health concerns of Tibetan children in Chinese state-run boarding schools.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Donald Trump to meet Xi Jinping in China after ‘very good' call on trade
Donald Trump to meet Xi Jinping in China after ‘very good' call on trade

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Donald Trump to meet Xi Jinping in China after ‘very good' call on trade

Donald Trump said he had accepted an invitation to meet Xi Jinping in China after a phone conversation on trade was held between the leaders of the world's two largest economies. In a post on Truth Social, the US president said the 'very good' call lasted about 90 minutes and the conversation was 'almost entirely focused on trade'. He wrote: 'The call lasted approximately one and a half hours, and resulted in a very positive conclusion for both Countries. There should no longer be any questions respecting the complexity of Rare Earth products. Our respective teams will be meeting shortly at a location to be determined … During the conversation, President Xi graciously invited the First Lady and me to visit China, and I reciprocated.' Trump added that teams from the US and China would meet soon at a location to be determined. The Chinese foreign ministry said Trump initiated the call, which was only the second time this year the two leaders had spoken one to one. They previously spoke in January, before Trump's inauguration. The discussion followed posts on social media by Trump that praised the Chinese leader but also suggested it was difficult to reach a deal with him. Trade negotiations between the US and China stalled shortly after an agreement between the countries on 12 May to reduce 145% import tariffs on China imposed by Washington, and Beijing's 125% tariffs on US imports in a tit-for-tat exchange. The agreement allowed for a reduction in tariffs during a 90-day moratorium before talks to resolve differences, especially over the export of Chinese rare earth metals, which are crucial to making electric cars and mobile phones. The US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, the commerce secretary, Howard Lutnick, and the US trade representative, Jamieson Greer, will represent the US side in negotiations. Trump is under pressure to resolve the dispute with China after a series of weak economic figures that showed a sharp slowdown in US growth and a reluctance among private companies to hire staff. Large US businesses have also complained about the high cost of purchasing vital goods made in China. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion The Chinese government said in a statement published by the state-run Xinhua news agency: 'Xi Jinping welcomed Trump's visit to China again, and Trump expressed his sincere gratitude.' However, it added: 'The US side should take a realistic view of the progress made and withdraw the negative measures imposed on China.' China's decision in April to suspend exports of a wide range of critical minerals and magnets has disrupted supplies needed by carmakers, computer chip manufacturers and military contractors around the world. Trump has long pushed for a call or a meeting with Xi, but China has rejected the proposal as out of keeping with its traditional approach based on hammering out agreement details before the leaders talk.

Donald Trump confirms China trip after 'very good' call with Xi Jinping
Donald Trump confirms China trip after 'very good' call with Xi Jinping

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Donald Trump confirms China trip after 'very good' call with Xi Jinping

Donald Trump has said he will visit China after speaking to its leader Xi Jinping over the US president said he had reciprocated with an invite to the White House during the "very good talk" - though such a trip has not been confirmed by either call is the first time the two leaders have spoken since Trump launched a trade war with Beijing in February. Chinese state media reported that the call happened at the White House's wrote on social media that the hour-and-a-half conversation was primarily focused on trade and had "resulted in a very positive conclusion for both countries". China says US has 'severely violated' tariffs truceChina hits back after Trump claims it is 'violating' tariff truce "He invited me to China and I invited him here," Trump said of the call with Xi while meeting German Chancellor Friedrich Merz in the Oval Office."We both accepted, so I will be going there with the first lady at a certain point and he will be coming here hopefully with the first lady of China."The Chinese readout of the conversation mentioned the its invitation but not the reciprocal one to the White to Chinese state news agency Xinhua, Xi reportedly told Trump that the US should "withdraw the negative measures it has taken against China".The Chinese leader was also said to have told Trump that China always kept its promises and since a consensus had been reached, both sides should abide by it - a reference to a recent deal between the two nations struck in sides have accused the other of breaching the deal aimed at dramatically reducing trade tariffs - a deal Trump touted as a "total reset".It came after Trump raised tariffs on imports from a number of countries, but reserved the highest rates for China. Beijing responded with its own higher rates on US imports, sparking tit-for-tat increases that peaked at 145%.The tentative truce struck in May brought that US tariff on Chinese products down to 30%, while Beijing slashed levies on US imports to 10% and promised to lift barriers on critical mineral exports. The agreement gave both sides a 90-day deadline to try to reach a trade since then, talks have seemed to grind to a halt amid claims on both sides that the deal had been breached. The US has accused China of failing to restart shipments of critical minerals and rare earth magnets vital to car and computer industries. The Chinese Ministry of Commerce has denied the claims and accused the US of undermining the deal by introducing new restrictions on computer introduced new export restrictions on semiconductor design software and announced it would revoke the visas of Chinese US president said following the call that "there should no longer be any questions respecting the complexity of Rare Earth products".He told reporters in the White House: "Chinese students can come, no problem, no problem - its an honour to have them frankly. But we want to check them." Chinese state media reported that Xi warned Washington that it should handle Taiwan "with caution" to avoid conflict, just days after US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said China posed an "imminent" threat to the self-governed island. Hegseth told the Shangri-la Dialogue in Singaport that Beijing was "credibly preparing to potentially use military force to alter the balance of power".China sees Taiwan as a breakaway province that will eventually be reunified, and has not ruled out the use of force to achieve this. The US supports Taiwan militarily but does not officially recognise it due to the "One China" to the readout of Thursday's call given to Chinese media, Xi stressed that the US should handle the "Taiwan issue prudently to prevent a small number of Taiwan Independence separatists from dragging China and the US into a dangerous situation of conflict and confrontation".The call between Trump and Xi is long awaited and comes after months of silence between the two White House has touted the possibility they might talk from week one of Trump's presidency - and earlier this week he finally vented his frustration on social wrote: "I like President Xi of China, always have, and always will, but he is VERY TOUGH, AND EXTREMELY HARD TO MAKE A DEAL WITH!"Trump has made it clear that he likes to be involved in negotiations. But this is not the way China does prefers to appoint a negotiating team led by a trusted official. Any calls or meeting between heads of state are usually thoroughly planned and highly choreographed. The Chinese will also not want to be seen to bend to Washington's demands.

Trump administration ending protected status for Nepalese migrants
Trump administration ending protected status for Nepalese migrants

Reuters

time2 hours ago

  • Reuters

Trump administration ending protected status for Nepalese migrants

June 5 (Reuters) - The Trump administration has moved to end deportation protections the United States granted to thousands of Nepalese people after a 2015 earthquake devastated the country, according to a government notice posted on Thursday. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in the notice that the administration is terminating temporary protected status for Nepal after a review found the country has largely recovered from the disaster. "There are notable improvements in environmental disaster preparedness and response capacity, as well as substantial reconstruction from the earthquake's destruction such that there is no longer a disruption of living conditions and Nepal is able to handle adequately the return of its nationals," the notice said. The department estimates there are around 12,700 Nepalese with the status, which provides deportation relief and work permits to people already in the U.S. if their home countries experience a natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary event. Of those, approximately 5,500 have lawful permanent residence in the U.S. The notice said the revocation will take effect 60 days from Friday, giving the approximately 7,000 Nepalese migrants with temporary protected status who aren't permanent residents until August 5, 2025, to leave the country or change their immigration status. After that date, they could face deportation. The Department of Homeland Security and the Nepalese embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Donald Trump, who returned to the presidency in January, has pledged to deport record numbers of migrants in the United States illegally and has moved to strip certain migrants of temporary legal protections, expanding the pool of possible deportees. During his first term from 2017 to 2021, Trump's administration tried to end most enrollment in the temporary protected status program, but was stymied by federal courts. Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court let the Trump administration end temporary protected status that was granted to hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans in the U.S. by his predecessor Joe Biden. Trump has also sought to end the status for Haitians, Afghans and others.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store