|
NEWS
TRIN-GYI-PHO-NYA: TIBET'S ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT DIGEST Tibet Justice Center, 2288 Fulton Street, Suite 312, Berkeley, CA 94704
March 3, 2004, Vol. 2, No. 2
CONTENTS: I. OP-ED: Mobizing Against China's Dam Plans II. OP-ED:
Environment Eclipsed By Politics III. English translation of a smuggled tape
from Tibet urging the UN to protect Potala Palace IV. News-in-Brief V. Job Announcement for Tibetans
I. OP-ED: Mobilizing Against China's Dam Plans Doris
Shen*
Over 80 people's groups in Thailand and Burma are speaking out
against China's plans for large dams on the Nu (or Salween) River. The groups
say that the dams will bring devastating effects for people downstream, and
called on China to consult with downstream communities who depend on the river
for fishing and farming. Increased criticisms of the plans for the Nu are
not only coming from the outside. Within China, academics, journalists and
activists from China's burgeoning NGO sector are also expressing concerns about
the social and environmental impacts of the dam cascade. The Nu River, or
Gyalmo Ngulchu for upstream Tibetan people, becomes the Salween as it flows into
Burma and along the Thailand border. Releases of "sediment-hungry" water from
upstream dams could erode riverbanks downstream, destroying dry season riverbank
vegetable gardens and destabilizing housing structures. Changes in the sediment
load and water flow will carry harmful impacts to fisheries. "There are
many Thai-Karen communities living along the river and its tributaries. These
communities have been living there for generations," said Chinarong Sretthachau,
Director of the South East Asia Rivers Network (SEARIN), based in Chiang Mai,
Thailand. "Their lives depend on the richness of the lush ecosystem and natural
resources of the Salween river basin." With the emergence of a new
Chinese leadership that claims to be committed to more openness, public
participation, environmental protection, and reducing social inequalities,
Chinese civil society is experiencing a marked increase in political freedom.
This new freedom is permitting increasing public criticism of China's
dam-building plans, in particular of the proposed dams in the southwest. The
recent indefinite suspension of a dam by the governor of Sichuan Province
following public awareness campaigns about the dam's impacts to a cultural
heritage site is a striking sign of the new atmosphere within the
country. Journalists, researchers, and NGO activists from across the
country recently came together to discuss the impacts of hydropower
projects. Hosted by the Centre for Environment and Development of the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), participants in the Beijing meeting
were mainly concerned about the dams in the southwest but also discussed
resettlement and environmental impacts of dams more generally, international
trends in dam building, and the broader environmental impacts of the "Go West"
development drive. China is relying heavily on hydropower to meet its
soaring demand for electricity. Officials plan to triple installed hydroelectric
capacity to 270,000 MW by 2020. "This situation calls for reform of
regulations governing these projects and the mechanism for implementing those
regulations," said Li Dun, a professor with the Centre for Study of Contemporary
China at Qinghua University. "Evaluation of project impacts should be done by
independent experts and their names should be made public. Construction plans
should be subject to public scrutiny, and officials who make decisions that
prove to be wrong should be held accountable," Professor Li
suggested.
[*Doris Shen runs the China Program at the Internatational
Rivers Network based in Berkeley, California. She can be contacted via
e-mail at doris@irn.org]
II.
OP-ED: Environment Eclipsed By Politics Gabriel
Lafitte* As soon as
environmentalists take an interest in Tibet, they are immediately pressured to
take sides. Environmental NGOs in the rich countries must choose to work in
China, by Chinese rules, or to forego all opportunity of doing anything
practical and grounded inside China if they choose to associate with Tibetans
free to speak, in exile. Environmental NGOs have flourished in recent years in
China, and it would be cynical to dismiss them as tools of the Chinese
government, though many are offshoots of official institutions and all must
operate within strict limits. However many of these Chinese NGOs work in Tibet,
helping stop poaching of rare species by immigrant hunters, and in conserving
watersheds and wetlands. They do work where the Chinese government has failed to
do. China's all-embracing definition of what is political means that
Tibetans cannot organise their own NGOs, for fear of being labeled political and
splittist, even if their sole objective is to replant trees on eroding
hillslopes. So far the only NGOs able to work in Tibet are founded by Chinese in
distant cities, who come to Tibet, but have limited connection with
Tibetans. One way of dealing with the hyper-politicisation of Tibet is to
turn environmental issues into strictly technical scientific questions. This is
the strategy favoured by international NGOs operating in Tibet such as The
Nature Conservancy and World Wildlife Fund. This enables them to get official
permission to work in remote areas of the Tibetan Plateau, and do scientific
research, and come up with comprehensive integrated plans for biodiversity
conservation and biome protection. But the scientific technical language tends
to exclude Tibetans from active participation, not just because the language is
technical but also because ecology as a discipline tends to consider humans,
including populations who have shaped the land for thousands of years, as extra
to the ecosystem. Yet again, Tibetans miss out, or are even seen as part of the
problem. Instead of including Tibetans, as owners and managers of
reforestation, wildlife rangers, bearers of indigenous knowledge, the locals are
all too often sidelined, or blamed as hunters invading the nature reserve with
trucks and rifles, stealing firewood from a forest from which they have been
fenced out. This sets up an unhealthy antagonism between human and environmental
needs, which is quite unnecessary given the Tibetan desire to repair what has
been lost in recent decades, as species diversity declined under immigrant
predation. China has discovered it cannot forever take both Tibetan trees
and Tibetan water as if they were an unending free public good, a cost free form
of natural capital there for the taking. China has switched to conservation of
watersheds crucial to downstream water supply. This switch promises to reforest
and conserve much of Kham and Amdo, in eastern Tibet, that had been increasingly
stripped for timber and mineral extraction. Now that reforestation is official
policy, and international NGOs are involved, there is opportunity for Tibetans
to regain a direct role in rehabilitation of degraded landscapes. Yet all too
often China's method of achieving reforestation or protection excludes Tibetans.
China calls one of its remediation policies 'mountain closure', which means
fencing regenerating hillslopes against nomadic use, excluding pastoralists from
pasture and from involvement in land management. When seedlings are planted and
steep slopes reseeded, all too often Tibetans are exc! luded from employment
as careers. Instead much sowing is done by dropping seeds from the air, a
wasteful and ineffective, literally top-down approach. The international
NGOs now generating biosphere conservation plans for major parts of Tibet have
an important opportunity to quietly overcome this exclusion of Tibetans, and
educate Chinese officials in the lessons learned in the past 30 years in social
forestry and community participation. Exclusion is self-defeating. The
only argument for ongoing exclusion of Tibetans from regenerating Tibet is
political. Perhaps we will soon be able to look at environmental and sustainable
Tibetan livelihood issues in their own right, not as a purely political
issue. [*Gabriel Lafitte teaches at Victoria University in Melbourne,
Australia. He can be contacted via e-mail at glafitte@techinfo.com.au]
III.
Excerpts from the English translation of a smuggled tape from Tibet urging the
UN to protect Potala Palace from mishandled renovation (Source: Voice of America, Tibetan Language Service, Feb.3,
2003) We are sending this
information from Tibet. In light of the studies we have done, we request the
Voice of America to broadcast this brief information about the Potala Palace to
the United Nations cultural preservation agency, to Chinese officials, to Tibet,
and to everyone, for if we speak in Tibet, we cannot make our point. It
is not good to be ignorant of this information, because the Chinese are using
the Potala Palace-which is under the protection of the United Nations world
heritage list-as a plaything. That is to say, during its first renovation the
Chinese authorities destroyed a section, about ten meters in diameter, of the
three-dimensional mandala that was constructed by the Seventh Dalai Lama. And
now it is beyond repair. In addition, the Chinese authorities say to everyone
and to the world that they have spent around a hundred million yuan on the
restoration of the Potala Palace. They have really given this money to hoodwink
the Tibetans. Even then, during the so-called renovation work, they avoid giving
renovation work to Tibetan master craftsmen. Instead, almost all of the work is
given to Chinese. The renovation work carried out by the Chinese is
totally different from the work carried out by the Tibetans. The reason is that
the Potala Palace, which was built using only earth and stone, has a long
history of thirteen hundred years, and during the time it was built there was no
cement. Now, during the renovation they use cement, so that they can finish the
job quickly. All the work with the painting of the Potala Palace frescos
and the pounding and flattening of its floors has been given to Chinese, but the
Chinese don't know anything about how to do the work. The reason is that our
Tibetan arka [a composite material of pulverized marble and oil, used for making
floors] has unique characteristics. We can see still point to arka floors that
are more than thirteen hundred years old. The Chinese say that the Tibetan
method of making their aggregate mixture is not correct and instead they use a
mixture of cement, soil and hair to make the floor, which is
worthless. The traditional Tibetan method of erecting walls involves
putting small pieces of tamarisk wood between the walls and the roof. On the
Yugyal Jok (gYu rgyal lcog) and Sharchen Jok (shar chen lcog) [two of the three
rooms raised above the rest of the Potala structure], the Chinese are replacing
the wood with cement and iron. The workers find it impossible to appeal to the
United Nations to stop this from being done. Cement has a history of only one
hundred years and it will cause great hardship to the renovation. By taking out
all the tamarisk wood from the wall, there is every possibility that all the
materials will be damaged and become useless. At present, even if there
is a slight chance of a wall coming down, we have the means and required
expertise to renovate it immediately. If cement and iron is used then it will
make future renovation work impossible. This is an important issue. Therefore it
would be good, if possible, for the renovation of the Potala Palace to be
carried out by Tibetan carpenters and masons only, without even a single Chinese
being involved. If that is not possible, then at least the work should be
carried out under the supervision and direction of Tibetan experts. At present,
the Chinese don't take advice. For example, with wood, they soak very high
quality dry wood in pesticide in a place in Lhasa called Drip. When we compare
the quality of the wood that has been treated with pesticide to the dry wood we
see that the treated wood is very inferior. For instance, if we throw the
treated wood on the floor, it breaks into pieces immediately. Basically, the
treatment method is incorrect. Similarly, the roof of the room in the
Potala Palace that houses the Eighth and Ninth Dalai Lamas' tombs has been
completely removed. Although it is said that a new roof will be put on jointly
by China and the Lhasa renovation office, in reality only the Chinese have any
actual authority. But even when the Chinese carry out the renovation, they will
not follow standard techniques, which will cause further damage to the
structure. They are doing this only to earn money, because there is no way they
are capable of doing the renovation. Whatever work is initiated and
carried out for the benefit of the Tibetan people, we request that it be done
only after consulting with the Tibetan people. In Tibet, there is no way
to look forward because our leaders think only in terms of losing their jobs and
titles. If a Tibetan speaks out, he or she is criticized by saying that a
nationalist or a separatist is raising his or her voice, so there is no place
where we can speak. To put it in brief, the Chinese are playing with the Potala
Palace, illustrated by the fact that when the Chinese talk of putting in a
pounded floor, they use a mixture of soil, cement, hair, and, sometimes,
glue. [.] since all the authorities are Chinese, we Tibetans do not have
any say. The planned duration for the renovation of the Potala is three
years. Already two years has elapsed and only one year is remaining. Since there
are no beams or rafters left, once again they had to go to Kongpo to cut some
timber. The Tibetan elder generation used to tell us that, in the olden days,
the lumber for the Potala renovations had to be dried for eleven or twelve years
before it was ready to be used. Now, they cut the tree and immediately dry it by
using electric drying machines. This process causes cracks in the wood and
ultimately the wood gets ripped apart. UNESCO has declared the Potala
Palace to be an important world heritage site, the UN must now lend its support
in real
terms.
NEWS IN BRIEF (Prepared by Dolkar Tenzing*)
1. Dechen Tibet Autonomous Prefecture, The Biggest Copper Center in
China? According to Yunnan Xinhua News, January 3, 2004, Dechen (Diqing
in Chinese) "will become the biggest copper field in China." Located between the
Sichuan and Yunnan valleys, Dechen Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture has rich
non-ferrous metals especially copper, zinc and lead. Exploratory research
at the Prefecture's Yangla reserve is reported to have found more than 600,000
tons of copper. Transference of mining rights to Yunnan Copper Group in
June 2003 have marked the beginning of exploitation of the Yanla mines,
according to the same report. Pulang, another major copper field in Dechen
TAP, is reported to have more than 2,000,000 tons of copper. Yunnan Copper
Group's Zhou Shaoliu has stated that the two reserves (Yangla and Pulang)
possess "millions of tons of copper" and are expected to produce 1,500,000 tons
of refined copper annually, making Dechen Tibet Autonomous Prefecture "the
biggest source of copper in China." Warning readers from taking official
Chinese news at face value, Gabriel Lafitte, an independent Tibet analyst, said
that the "the tonnages announced by China remain quite unproven to be in any way
commercial. The recent announcement by SinoGold that they are pulling out of
Jinkang gold deposit confirms that there is always a big gap between government
boasts of total tonnages in deposits, and a commercial, viable mining
enterprise. The figures in tonnages announced by Chinese government are
often driven by corporate puffery." 2. Chinese Students and International
Activists Voice Concern Over Plans to Develop Gyalmo Ngulchu (Source: www.chinariver.org) Students from
ten universities in Chongqi Povince organized a signature petition against the
construction of 13 dams on Gyalmo Ngulchu (Salween River, Nu Jiang in Chinese),
which was approved by China's State Department and Reform Committee in August
2003 (See Issue 2 of Trin-gyi-pho-nya). Urging the government not to make
policy decisions based on economic benefits alone, Tan Qiuping, leader of the
Environmental Committee of the Sichuan Foreign Language Department, requested
that the government consider the opinions of environmental experts and the
public before beginning the projects. Qiuping argues that poverty
alleviation of the people of Nu Jiang could be done by means other than
generating electricity from the river. In November 2003, 62 people,
including scientists, writers, journalists, singers and movie stars, signed a
petition against the project (see Issue 4 of Trin-gyi-pho-nya).
Plans to develop Gyalmo Ngulchu are also criticized by groups like the
Thailand based South East Asia Rivers Network (SEARIN) and the US based
International Rivers Network. Aviva Imhof of the International Rivers Network
warned that the "construction of the dam would subject residents living in the
project area to further systematic human rights violations." 3. Hunter
Dickinson to Mine Copper in Tibet (Source: http://www.hdgold.com/kmk/Home.asp) Canada
based Hunter Dickinson Inc. (HDI) has acquired a 60% interest in China NetTV
Holdings Inc.'s (CNTVHI) Shethongmon (Xietongmen in Chinese) Gold-Copper
deposit, situated approximately 240 kilometers southwest of Lhasa and located
between the Gangtisi Mountains and Tsangpo (Brahmaputra) River. According
to the "Property Option Agreement" signed by the two companies, "Continental
will pay a total of US$2,000,000 and incur expenditures totaling US$5,000,000
over a 24-month period in order to earn 50% interest in the Property from China
NetTV holdings Inc." "Continental has the right to acquire a further 10%
interest in the Property by incurring a further US$3,000,000 in expenditures.
Upon Continental earning its interest, further work would proceed under a joint
venture arrangement between the companies." 4. Sino Gold Pulls Out of
Tibet (Source: Australia Tibet Council; Business Report, South Africa,
February 1, 2004) Australia based Sino Gold Limited has announced that
the company has cancelled its plans to mine gold in Tibet. This decision
marks a victory for an international coalition of Tibetan rights advocates, led
by the Australia Tibet Council, that have been trying to stop Sino Gold from
mining Tibet's gold. Welcoming Sino Gold's decision, Paul Bourke of
Australia Tibet Council said, "We're pleased that Sino Gold has chosen to do the
right thing." "Tibet's gold and other resources rightfully belong to the
Tibetan people. We believe it is irresponsible to extract non renewable
resources while Tibetans are unable to exercise their internationally recognised
human rights, including deciding how their resources should be used."
Although Sino Gold said its decision was economic, based on the low
quality of gold ore at the site, it is clear that pressure from activist groups
played an important role. South Africa based Gold Fields, a partner
company of Sino Golds, had brought up the "Tibetan issue" at an internal
executive meeting between the companies even though Gold Fields was not directly
involved in Jinkhang, Tibet. Gold Fields has a 10 percent stake in Sino
Gold and a 50-50 joint venture with Sino to acquire and explore gold properties
in Shandong Province, China's richest gold producing region. "With solid
prospects outside (Tibet), this one project had to be weighed against the
potential damage that staying in Tibet could do to all shareholders' corporate
reputations," said Business Report. 5. Lhasa Beer Join Hands With
Carlsberg (Direct quote from Tibet News Digest - 13 February 2004)
"In a press statement released on 10 February 2004, Carlsberg, the
Danish brewers, announced that it and the Danish Industrialization Fund for
Developing Countries (IFU) is to acquire 50% of the share capital of Lhasa
Brewery in the TAR. The acquisition makes Carlsberg the market leader in the
TAR's fast growing beer market. In a speech in Lhasa, Sven Riskærs, the managing
director of IFU, who initiated the deal, said, 'I believe that this could be the
beginning of successful investment co-operation between Danish and local
enterprises in the Tibet Autonomous Region.' As Lhasa Brewery is free from debt,
had a turnover of approximately $20 million in 2003 (?16 million, £11 million)
and has approximately 45% of the market, it makes it one of the most profitable
breweries in the region. According to a report by Agence France Presse (AFP),
the current owner of the brewery, Tibet Galaxy Science & Technology
Development Co. Ltd. and Wilton Pacific will first set up a 50-50 brewery
v! enture, capitalized at $29.6 million ( ?23 million, £15.6 million).
Carlsberg will then purchase Wilton's stake in the venture, which is expected to
have annual production capacity of 150 000 tons." 6. Four Dams Proposed
for Upper Yangtze River (Source: Beijing Youth Daily, February 12,
2004) As a part of the "West to East Energy Transfer Project" (xi dian
dong song), four new hydropower stations have been proposed for construction
along the Jinsha River, an upstream stretch of the Yangtze River.
All four dams are located on the border between Yunnan Province and Sichuan
Province, between the cities of Panzhihua and Yibing, located along the
southeastern borders of traditional Tibet. The 12,600 mw Xiluodu
and 6,000 mw Xiangjiaba dams were already approved by the State Council, in
October 2002. Approvals for the 7,400 mw Wudongde and 12,500 mw Baihetan
are still pending. Preliminary site preparation construction will commence
at Xiluodu and Xiangjiaba this year, while pre-feasibility studies will be
carried out at Wudongde and Baihetan. The Central Government plans to use
income from the Three Gorges project to build the new dams. The entire
four-dam project is supposed to be completed by 2017. 7. Campaign to Make
Tibetan Antelope the 2008 Olympic Mascot (Source: ChinaTibet Network.
February 9, 2004) Qinghai Kekexili Nature Reserve Park, located in Yushu
Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, announced that they submitted the Tibetan
Antelope as a candidate for the mascot of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
Other candidates include the Panda, Huanan Tiger and the Monkey King, the
legendary monkey who assisted a Chinese monk in bringing Buddhism to China from
India. The campaign to make the Tibetan Antelope the 2008 Olympic mascot
has been conceived to raise awareness about the endangered species that is
hunted for its fine wool, shatoosh. The announcement drew much attention
among environmental groups as well as the Olympic Committee. The manager
of Kekexili Nature Reserve said that the Tibetan Antelope possesses the spirit
of the Olympic Games. The Tibetan Antelope signifies strength and endurance by
living in a very harsh environment, at an altitude between 4700-5000
meters. The Tibetan Antelope is also known for its speed as it can run
upto 70-110 kilometers per hour. The Tibetan Antelope also symbolizes
peace, as it has a gentle nature and does not harm other animals.
8. Tso-Ngonpo (Qinghai Lake) Splits into Several Lakes (Source:
Xinhua, February 24, 2004) Tso-Ngon, the largest lake on the Tibetan
Plateau, has split into one large lake and several smaller ones according to a
satellite photograph. "Xu Weixin, an engineer from the Qinghai Provincial
Remote Sensing Center, attributed the separation of Qinghai Lake to shrinkage of
the water surface as a result of a lowered water level and desertification in
the region." Tso-Ngon covers more than 4,000 square kilometers in area.
According to the same report, the water level of Tso-Ngon "has lowered by 3.7
meters in the past three decades and its water surface shrank by 312 square
kilometers." "In the 1960s, 108 freshwater rivers emptied into it.
However, 85 percent of the rivers around the lake have dried up now, including
the Buh River, the lake's largest tributary." 9. Kentucky Fried Chicken
In Tibet (Directly quoted from TIN News Digest, 16 January 2004) China
Daily reports that KFC, the US fast-food chain, a subsidiary of Yum Brands Inc
with 1,000 outlets throughout China, has received permission from the government
to enter Tibet, Samuel Su, Yum's greater China chief told reporters on 15
January. Su said Yum planned to open hundreds of KFC outlets in the country in
2004 and expand the Taco Bell franchise outside the commercial hub of
Shanghai. "Our experience has shown that when we get into cities, the
people are so excited that KFC has finally arrived that we attract very large
crowds," he said. 10. 22 More Dams on the Gyarong Ngulchu (Source: www.spddr.com, February 26, 2004) With
Pubugou currently under construction and Gongzui and Tongjiezi completed,
reports indicate there are currently 22 more dams with a total installed
capacity of 23,400 mw planned to be constructed on the mainstream of the
Gyarong Ngulchu (Daduhe river). The State Power Dadu River Development Co.
plans to complete 15 of the dams between 2001 and 2020. The company
announced that four major banks in China China Construction Bank, Industry
and Commerce Bank of China, China Development Bank and Bank of China have
expressed their long-term financial support of the projects.
[Dolkar Tenzing is an intern with Tibet Justice Center's Environment and
Development Program]
V.
JOB ANNOUNCEMENTS FOR TIBETANS (Source: www.phayul.com)
1. Tibetan Centre for Conflict Resolution requires a professional accountant
and invites applications from qualified Tibetans. Applicants should have a
minimum degree of B.Com from a recognised university. General Requirements:
The applicant must have an up-dated Green Book and RC. No objection
letter from your employer if currently employed. An attested copy of the
required documents along with a CV should be attached with the
application. Application should be submitted before 31st March 2004 to the
given address. Application received after the date stated would not be heeded.
Salary: Rs. 5000/ and other benefits. Send your application
package to: The Director Tibetan Centre for Conflict Resolution Nangsi
House, Gangchen Kyishong, Dharamsala- 176215 Distt. Kangra H.P. INDIA
Telephone: 01892- 226627 E-mail: tccroffice@yahoo.com 2. The
Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD) invites application from
bonafide Tibetans for three vacant posts in the Centre: Two Researchers and one
General Assistant. As a contract, the selected candidates will be required
to serve the Centre for a minimum period of three years. TCHRD is a
registered non-governmental organisation (NGO) established in January 1996 with
the primary objective of monitoring, researching and documenting human rights
situation in Tibet. The Centre also works toward global awareness of human
rights situation in Tibet, educating Tibetans in exile on human rights concepts
and democratic values and working with other human rights organisations around
the world towards common goal of universal freedom and peace. Applicants
for all the three positions should possess and furnish copies of the following
documents along with the application: Degree Certificates Registration
Certificate up to date Green Book up to date One page resume or bio data
Medical fitness certificate from any registered medical practitioner No
objection certificate from present employer if employed General
Conditions: Late and incomplete application will not be
entertained Application Deadline: 15 March 2004 Documents must be attested
by gazetted CTA staff holding the post of Joint Secretary or above or concerned
settlement/welfare officer Provide clear forwarding address with available
email/phone At the time of interview, the candidates must produce their
original mark sheet/degree certificate The Centre shall reserve
the right to reject any application without citing any reasons. Short-listed and
prospective candidates will be intimated by email latest by 25 March 2004.
Mode of selection will be written tests (both English and Tibetan) and
interview. ENGLISH RESEARCHER Job Description: The selected
candidates will be required to understand and carry out works related to human
rights and democracy at the Centre. They will join the Research team of the
Centre and will research and write reports on human rights situation in Tibet.
The candidates will also be required to take up multiple tasks as and when
necessary. Salary: Gross total Rs. 7276/ per month inclusive of House
Rent. Essential Qualifications: Minimum B.A. or equivalent degree
with 50% marks (Special weitage will be given to candidates with English
major) Preferred Skills: Good command over written and spoken English
Experience in research, translation and report writing Experience or
knowledge in human rights field or subject Working knowledge of Tibetan
language Good computer skills GENERAL ASSISTANT Job Description:
This full-time position will be in-charge of the Reception Desk, handle the
official email account of the Centre, support the Education and Campaign
sections, provide general clerical support to the Executive Director, attend to
Director's emails/letters and manage appointments of the Director in his/her
absence. Salary: Gross total Rs. 6648/- per month inclusive of House
Rent. Essential Qualifications: Minimum B.A. or equivalent degree
with 50% marks Preferred Skills: Good command over written and spoken
English Good working knowledge of Tibetan and Hindi languages Good
computer skills Ability to work under extreme pressure and at short notices
Address your application to: "Confidential" The Executive
Director Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy Gangchen
Kyishong, Dharamsala - 176215 (HP), INDIA Telefax: 01892 223363/225874
Email: tsewangl@tchrd.org
|