Friends and neighbours of the Tibetan protester who set himself alight in New Delhi said on Tuesday that his actions were out of character but driven by desperation felt by many in his community. Jamphel Yeshi lives in the Majnu ka Tila refugee enclave in the north of the city, where thousands of Tibetan exiles have been based for decades after fleeing from China.
Many, like Yeshi, a 27-year-old who fled China in 2006, are young adults who have become increasingly frustrated by what they see as the Chinese government’s religious repression in their homeland. Tenzing Choegyal, a Tibetan Youth Congress activist, said his friend could never forget the “torture” he said that he suffered at the hands of Chinese authorities in Tibet.
“Yeshi was a political prisoner in Tibet. He was arrested twice by Chinese cops as he tried to escape. He said he was tortured badly before he finally managed to escape to India,” said Choegyal, 31. On Monday, Yeshi doused himself in fuel and lit himself while attending a protest against President Hu Jintao’s planned visit to India this week for a summit. He ran screaming down the street as flames engulfed his body before he collapsed with severe burns and was taken to hospital, where doctors say his life hangs in the balance. Choegyal said that although Yeshi felt deeply frustrated over Tibet’s fate, there were no signs that he planned a self-immolation attempt. “Even on the morning, he was very normal. He went to the monastery in the colony as usual to light the lamps. He was cheerful,” he said. Dozens of Tibetans, many of them Buddhist monks and nuns, are reported to have set themselves on fire in Tibetan-inhabited areas of China since early 2011, but Yeshi’s neighbours did not expect him to do the same.
“He is a very gentle guy. He loves reading and writing for hours,” said Tsering Palmo, a 38-year-old housewife who lives next door to Yeshi’s shared two-room flat. “I saw him almost everyday. He would sit outside his house and read a lot.” Yeshi, who lost his father at a young age, came to India via Nepal, but his mother still lives in Tibet, friends say. He attended school in the Indian hill town of Dharamshala, home of Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, before moving to Delhi. Without a permanent job, Yeshi has done translation work and arranged travel for Tibetans inside India and to Nepal. Since his protest, which made headlines around the world, Tibetans in Delhi have vowed to step up angry protests against President Hu and bring public attention to the Tibetan cause during the summit on Thursday. Indian security forces have responded by pouring men into Majnu ka Tila to discourage protests and prevent any further self-immolation attempts.