( dpa ) - China said it will not punish a group of Tibetan monks for disrupting a government-organized foreign media tour of Lhasa yesterday as it allowed a delegation of western diplomats to travel to the city Friday.
The government-arranged tour for foreign journalists was disrupted Thursday by a group of 30 monks protesting against Chinese rule and accusing China of lies with one shouting " Tibet is not free! Tibet is not free!"
"But what they said is not true. They were attempting to mislead the world's opinion," the official Xinhua news agency quoted Baema Chilain,vice-chairman of the Chinese-controlled Tibet Autonomous Region, as saying.
"The facts shouldn't be distorted."
Tibetans in exile said they feared for the fate of the outspoken monks.
Bowing to international pressure, China allowed 17 Beijing-based diplomats - from countries including Germany, the US, Britain, France and Australia - will be accompanied by Chinese officials on their two-day visit to assess for themselves the situation after unrest in the Tibetan capital Lhasa.
US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack welcomed the move as "a step in the right direction," but said it was not a "substitute" for diplomats and others to travel to Lhasa and to surrounding Tibetan regions currently closed to diplomats and journalists.
The journalists arrived in Lhasa on Wednesday for their highly regimented, three-day trip as China sought to quiet criticism that it was barring independent journalists from Tibetan areas where demonstrations and unrest have broken out since March 10, the 49th anniversary of a failed Tibetan uprising against Chinese rule.
Three days later, those protests escalated into riots in Lhasa. The Chinese government has said 22 people were killed in the violence there, but the India-based Tibetan government in exile said it confirmed the deaths of about 140 people, many of them Tibetans shot by Chinese police.