China has confirmed that a Tibetan was shot dead by security forces in Sichuan province, in the second day of unrest this week.
Local officials said a mob attacked a police station in Seda county on Tuesday, Xinhua news agency reported.
Tibetan activist groups said security forces fired on people protesting against religious repression.
On Monday, at least two other protesters were killed in neighbouring Draggo county.
There are large communities of ethnic Tibetans in several parts of Sichuan province, which borders Tibet.
Accounts of violence in the area differ and are difficult to
verify. Foreign media, including the BBC, are rarely allowed access
there.
Xinhua news agency said that police used force in Seda "after
efforts involving persuasion and non-lethal weapon defence failed to
disperse the mob". Its report said one "rioter" was killed.
Police said that the mob attacked the police station "with gasoline bottles, knives and stones" and "opened fire at us".
Xinhua
also quoted experts from the Sichuan Tibetan Research Institute as
saying that the two "attacks" in Sichuan province were "premeditated and
organised violence".
But Tibet campaign groups dispute this version of events and
say at least two people were killed in Seda. UK-based Free Tibet says
that the town is now under curfew, citing local residents.
Free Tibet director Stephanie Brigden said in a statement on
Wednesday that China was "responding with lethal force" to Tibetans'
"calls for freedom".
'Dozens injured'
On Monday, it was reported that at least two people were killed in another clash in Sichuan province.
Chinese state media said a mob armed with knives ''stormed
and smashed some stores along a main street and a police station'', and
also destroyed four vehicles in Draggo county.
Activists say Chinese security forces opened fire on peaceful demonstrators.
Free Tibet reported two dead, while the Tibetan
parliament-in-exile in India and the US-based rights group International
Campaign for Tibet put the death toll at three. Xinhua said one person
died.
A monk from the monastery in Draggo told the Associated Press
news agency in a telephone interview on Tuesday that 33 people were
being treated for injuries at the compound.
The US state department has expressed serious concern about
the reports, urging the Chinese government "to engage in a constructive
dialogue with the Dalai Lama or his representatives as a means to
address Tibetan concerns".
But Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei said on
Tuesday that "overseas secessionist groups" were trying to discredit the
government.
In recent months, however, there have been several protests and incidents in ethnic Tibetan parts of Sichuan province.
Since March 2011, 16 ethnic Tibetans have set themselves on
fire in what are described as protests at perceived cultural and
religious repression under Chinese rule. Several of them are known to
have died.
The authorities in Beijing have moved to suppress religious activism since riots in Tibet four years ago killed 19 people.
China's government has described the self-immolators as
terrorists and has accused the Dalai Lama of encouraging their actions
in order to put pressure on the authorities to make political
concessions.
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