Tibetan Nun Lands in US
(AP | Beijing | March 28, 2003)
A Tibetan nun who was China's longest-serving female political prisoner
traveled to the United States Friday, a US-based activist said.
Ngawang Sangdrol flew to the United States accompanied
by a US diplomat, said John Kamm, president of the
Dui Hua Foundation in San Francisco.
Imprisoned as a 15-year-old in 1992 for taking part in
demonstrations against Chinese rule in Tibet, Ngawang
Sangdrol was paroled in October, Kamm said. Her
sentence was to have run through 2011.
Ngawang Sangdrol and 13 other imprisoned nuns became
known as the "singing nuns" after they recorded songs
about their love for their families and their
homeland. Activists say their sentences were extended
after the tape was smuggled out of Tibet's Drapchi
Prison.
Ngawang Sangdrol was a focus of lobbying by
Washington. The US ambassador to Beijing,
Clark T Randt, mentioned her in several speeches about
"prisoners of conscience or victims of China's legal system."
Details of her departure were finalized during recent
talks between Chinese officials and Lorne Craner, the
US State Department's top human rights official,
according to Kamm, who has been involved in the
release of several prominent Chinese prisoners.
Ngawang Sangdrol reportedly arrived in Chicago Friday
afternoon and was expected to continue on to Washington.
State Department spokesman Lou Fintor said Friday said
Washington was pleased China allowed Ngawang Sangdrol to leave.
"The administration and Department of State,
members of Congress, posts in China, have been actively
involved on her behalf for years," Fintor said.
Ngawang Sangdrol was allowed to leave China to seek
treatment for severe headaches, which Chinese doctors
were unable to cure, Kamm said.
Other activists say she was confined to bed much of
the time with a heart condition and other problems
aggravated by the hardships of prison life.
China has used medical parole as a way to rid itself
of imprisoned dissidents. They usually are released on
condition they go abroad, where communist authorities
hope they will lose their political effectiveness.
Pro-democracy leader Xu Wenli was paroled in December
and flown to the United States.
China often times such releases to coincide with key
political events. Ngawang Sangdrol was paroled shortly
before then-President Jiang Zemin made his last visit
to the United States in October as China's leader.
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