Send Your Voice to Beijing

Sangye Lhamo, 26, a nun at Dragkar nunnery in Kham (today's Sichuan province) is one of hundreds of Tibetan nuns who, in the past year, have taken a leading role in dissent. The nuns were part of a "second wave" of protests in response to China's crackdown on peaceful protests & stringent 'patriotic education' campaigns that compel Tibetans to denounce the Dalai Lama. By June of 2008, more than 80 nuns had been detained.

Click here to sign an e-mail letter to China's president Hu Jintao. Call on him to immediately account for and release the more than 1,000 of the 4,434 Tibetans detained during 2008's peaceful protests.




Give Your Voice to Justice for Tibet.



Urgent Action:
Give Your Voice to Justice for Tibet

Send Your Voice to Congress
"A young soldier pointed an automatic rifle at me and said in Chinese, 'This is made to kill you. You make one move and I will definitely kill you with this gun. I will throw your corpse in the trash and nobody will ever know'."

- Jigme Gyatso, Tibetan monk

Send a letter to your representatives in the Senate and the House. Click here to copy and paste a letter that you can send by post or e-mail.



Send Your Voice to President Obama

On April 2 President Barack Obama, China's President Hu Jintao, and the leaders of the G-20 nations will meet in London to discuss a range of international issues. You can send a powerful message to President Barack Obama, urging him to use all diplomatic pressure to convince Mr. Hu to engage in genuine negotiations with the Dalai Lama; to guarantee that China will immediately cease the use of force against peaceful protestors in Tibet; and to press Mr. Hu to accede to the United Nations' recent request for a "thorough and independent inquiry" into China's excessive use of force in Tibet.

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