Headlines
  • On Monday at 14:00 GMT, the US military says it would start blockading Iranian ports, preventing ships from entering or leaving Iran from passing through the Strait of Hormuz.
  • In the southern town of Biyyada, Hezbollah claims that its men have attacked Israeli soldiers with "a swarm of attack drones."
  • US President Donald Trump's threat to block the Strait of Hormuz was deemed "ridiculous" by Iran's navy chief, Shahram Irani.
  • Any military ships approaching the Strait of Hormuz "will be considered a violation of the ceasefire and will be met with severe force," according to a statement released on Sunday by Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
  • The speaker of Iran's parliament Mohammad Baqer Ghalibaf ​ is leading the delegation that has arrived to Pakistan for talks with the United States.
  • Nawaf Salam, the prime minister of Lebanon, stated that he was working to ensure the withdrawal of Israeli forces and to put an end to the Israel-Hezbollah conflict.
  • Viktor Orban, the longtime prime minister of Hungary, has conceded defeat to Peter Magyar in the country's legislative election.

More Details

China’s ‘Anti-Gang’ Campaign Used to Crack Down on Tibetan Community Service Groups

By Richard Finney

Tibetan land protesters are shown at their trial in a court in Gansu’s Sangchu county, June 29, 2020Screen Grab/RFA

Ten Tibetan villagers given long prison terms by a Chinese court this year on charges of extortion were targeted in an anti-gang campaign used as a cover for cracking down on grass-roots community organizations deemed threats to Communist Party control, a Tibetan advocacy group said on Thursday.

Residents of Sangchu (in Chinese, Xiahe) county in Gansu province’s Kanlho (Gannan) Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, the villagers were tried under a three-year effort aimed at wiping out “gang activity” and organized crime in China, the Washington-based International Campaign for Tibet said in a report.

“In reality, the trial shows that the defendants, who are respected community leaders, were only requesting compensation for property damage from state highway projects,” said ICT, which reviewed a 10-hour video of the trial, which was broadcast live on Gansu television, in preparing its report.

Defendants had also raised concerns about a slaughterhouse in their hometown, and had raised funds to procure a piece of abandoned land for the use of their local monastery, ICT said, adding that both prosecutors and judges had repeatedly referred to the group on trial as an “evil gang.”

Following their conviction in the June 28-29 trial, the villagers were sentenced to prison terms of from nine to 14 years after compensation payments awarded in 2013 for damage to local dwellings caused by road work were presented in court as evidence of “extortion,” the Tibetan rights group said.

A one-million yuan donated the year before by a slaughterhouse company for construction of a Buddhist monument called a stupa to comfort Tibetan community members upset by the slaughter of animals was also used in evidence against them.

“Tibetans in general have been concerned by ill-conceived development projects imposed top-down by Beijing,” ICT said in its report, adding that Tibetans in Sangchu county have been challenging state development projects in their area for years.

“They feel these projects threaten the survival of their traditional way of life,” with the forms of Tibetan challenges ranging from repeated complaints made to local Chinese authorities, open public protests, and even self-immolations, ICT said.

To deter suspected challenges to Party control even at the village level, Chinese authorities meanwhile view Tibetans’ community service and organizing—with the Sangchu defendants’ Monastery Folk Management Committee held out as an example—as a form of “gang crime,” the rights group said.

Defense attorneys pointed out at trial that their clients had not extorted anyone, ICT said. “They also raised concerns about the years-long delay in charging the 10 Tibetans and other procedural flaws.”

“The conviction of the Sangchu 10 exposes the flaws of China’s ‘anti-gang’ campaign and judicial system in Tibet, which unfairly targets Tibetans,” ICT President Matteo Mecacci said in an Oct. 1 statement.

“The people of Tibet are entitled to their fundamental rights, including when prosecuted, and the Chinese authorities should realize that by unjustly punishing Tibetans, they only aggravate the situation and increase the people’s mistrust in their rule,” Mecacci said.

Development projects in Tibetan areas have led to frequent standoffs with Tibetans who accuse Chinese firms and local officials of pilfering money, improperly seizing land, and disrupting the lives of local people.

Many result in violent suppression and intense pressure on the local population to comply with the government’s wishes, with protest leaders frequently detained and charged under cover of a Chinese campaign against so-called “underworld criminal gangs” in Tibetan areas.

Copyright © 1998-2020, RFA. Used with the permission of Radio Free Asia, 2025 M St. NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20036. https://www.rfa.org

World’s Smallest Hotel

Eh Hausl, was constructed in 1728. With barely 53 meters of floor space, it was the smallest hotel in the world until 2022, according to the Guinness
Read More

Pumi Dog Breed

The small sized Pumi dog breed is a harding dog that originated in Hungary.This type of dog has upright ears with folded tips and a square, compact bo
Read More

Computer Incident Handling

Businesses and organizations can create an effective strategy to guarantee cybersecurity by using incident handling, a cybersecurity technique.Accordi
Read More

Coton de Tulear Dogs Breed

The Coton de Tulear is a small white dog breed that originated in Madagascar and is named after the port city of Tuléar. The French word “coton” refer
Read More

Subscribe Our You Tube Channel

Fighting Fake News

Fighting Lies








































Related Article

US to Set Up Philippines Fuel…

Washington is planning a fuel depot in the southern Philippines that could support humanitarian and ...
April 11, 2026

Japan’s Combat Role in Philippines War…

Japan sending combat troops to participate in upcoming exercises in the Philippines is a signal of a ...
April 9, 2026

PNG-Australia Defense Treaty Creates Jobs, Risks…

Six months after Papua New Guinea and Australia signed a bilateral defense treaty, public opinion in ...
April 8, 2026

China-US Competition for Rare Earths Sparks…

A U.S. plan to potentially mine an area of Pacific seabed roughly the size of Nevada near two U.S. t ...
April 2, 2026

North Korean Hackers Offer $70,000 Per…

Cybersecurity engineer Toufik Airane was approached by a North Korean hacker who offered him a small ...
March 27, 2026

Vietnam Protests China’s Development of Disputed…

Vietnam has condemned China’s land reclamation activities at Antelope reef in the disputed Paracel ...
March 24, 2026

Other Article

Bizzare News

World’s Smallest Hotel

Recognized by Guiness World Records on April 18, 2023, Trafo-Häuschen is the current title holder o ...
April 13, 2026
Pet Corner

Pumi Dog Breed

The small sized Pumi dog breed is a harding dog that originated in Hungary.This type of dog has upri ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

Computer Incident Handling

Businesses and organizations can create an effective strategy to guarantee cybersecurity by using in ...
News & Views

US to Set Up Philippines Fuel…

Washington is planning a fuel depot in the southern Philippines that could support humanitarian and ...
April 11, 2026
Pick of the Day

Press Briefing on Humanitarian Situation in…

Edem Wosornu, Director of the Crisis Response Division in the Office for the Coordination of Humanit ...
Bizzare News

Texas Woman Sentenced to Six Years…

After pleading a guilty plea to mailing synthetic cannabinoids and other drugs into facilities run b ...
April 10, 2026

Top