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Book review: Tibet, the Last Cry, by Eric Meyer

Few are the foreign journalists who have visited Tibet. The number is even fewer since the Lhasa riots of March 2008 and the start of self-immolations in 2009, in which more than 40 have died.

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Tibet's monasteries that were torn down 35 years ago were rebuilt by monks using materials paid for by the public treasury. Photo: Laurent Zylberman


by Eric Meyer
Blacksmith Books
4 stars

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Few are the foreign journalists who have visited Tibet. The number is even fewer since the Lhasa riots of March 2008 and the start of self-immolations in 2009, in which more than 40 have died.

So the debate over Tibet is locked between the accusations of the exiled government in India and the unforgiving Beijing. This book is welcome in providing first-hand accounts of the lives and the extraordinary landscape of Tibet by two French journalists: photographer Laurent Zylberman and writer Eric Meyer.

They were the only freelance journalists granted official access to Tibet following the riots of March 14-16, 2008, in Lhasa and stayed for two weeks. Meyer knows China well, having lived there since 1987.

During the riots, Tibetan crowds ransacked shops and hotels owned by Han and Hui people. In response, thousands of soldiers and armed police sealed off the city's biggest monasteries. It was the biggest protest against Chinese rule in nearly 20 years. According to Chinese figures, rioters killed 18 people and injured 623, including 241 police and armed police.

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Because the book was too "balanced" and did not fit mainstream opinion, the authors were unable to find a commercial publisher. So, in the autumn of 2011, they promoted it on www.kickstarter.com: 220 people were moved to provide the funds to publish the book in French, English and Spanish. The authors are donating half of their rights to two NGOs.

The value of the book is the dialogue with different people, which captures the ambiguity and complexity of the situation. Take Dianba, a 55-year-old farmer who cultivates 166 hectares of wheat, soybean, rapeseed and barley, and owns 20 yaks and five pigs. He also owns a two-storey house of stone, with multicoloured wood around the balcony.

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