The Chairman of the Tibetan Cabinet, Kalon Tripa Samdhong Rinpoche, has welcomed the release of Takna Jigme Sangpo and thanked “every individual, Tibet Support Groups, human rights organisations, parliamentarians, governments who have worked so hard” for the release. In a statement on April 4, 2002, Samdhong Rinpoche said he hoped that this was not a token gesture by the Chinese authorities and that they are seriously concerned about the plight of political prisoners in Tibet. Following is the full text of the statement.

Dharamsala, 4 April 2002: Takna Jigme Sangpo, Tibet’s longest serving political prisoner, was reportedly released on medical parole on March 31, 2002, after serving more than three decades in prison.

The 76-year-old Takna JigmeSangpo was first reportedly arrested in 1960 while teaching at the Lhasa Primary School on charges of “corrupting the minds of children with reactionary ideas.” In 1964 he received a second sentence, where he served three years in Sangyip Prison for making comments regarding Chinese repression of Tibetans.

Takna Jigme was again sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment in Sangyip Prison for ‘counter-revolutionary’ propaganda in 1970. He had been caught attempting to send a document reporting Chinese atrocities to His Holiness the Dalai Lama via his niece, who was trying to flee Tibet. At the age of 53 Takna Jigme was released from prison in 1979 and transferred to the ‘reform-through-labour’ Unit No. 1 in Nyethang, 60 km west of Lhasa.

Takna Jigme was re-arrested on 3 September 1983for pasting a ‘personally written’ wall-poster protesting against Chinese authority on the main gate of the Jokhang Temple in Lhasa, and sentenced him on 24 November 1983 to 15 years imprisonment for “spreading and inciting counterrevolutionary propaganda,” and five years deprivation of political rights. On 1 December 1988, his sentence was increased by another five years for “spreading and inciting counter-revolutionary propaganda.”

On the 6 December 1991 Takna Jigme made another bold attempt at an individual protest. During an official visit by a Swiss delegation Jigme shouted “Free Tibet” in English, a phrase he had especially learnt for the occasion, and slogans in Chinese and Tibetan, from his cell. The authorities tried to explain away the incident by claiming to the delegates that he was ‘mad’.

Takna Jigme was subsequently sentenced on 4 April 1992 to a further eight years imprisonment, and an additional three years deprivation of civil and political rights, bringing his sentence to 28 years and by his released on 3 September 2011, he would have spent 41 years in prison.

“I welcome this decision by the People’s Republic of China to release the longest-serving political prisoner of Tibet,” said Prof. Samdhong Rinpoche, the Kalon Tripa of the Kashag (the highest executive body of the Central Tibetan Administration).

“Yet I hope that this is not a token gesture by the Chinese authorities and that they are seriously concerned about the plight of political prisoners in Tibet.”

“We plea to the People’s Republic of China to release other Tibetan political prisoners languishing in various prisons and sincerely hope that the Chinese leadership will find the courage, wisdom and vision to solve the Tibetan issue through negotiations,” added Samdhong Rinpoche.

“I take this opportunity to thank every individual, Tibet Support Groups, human rights organisations, parliamentarians, governments who have worked so hard for Takna Jigme’s release,” said the Kalon Tripa.