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Tibetan Ukay Daily Evening Program - Top Headlines for May 09, 2025:
European Parliament Condemns China’s Interference in His Holiness the Dalai Lama's Succession
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Tibetan Ukay Daily Evening Program - Top Headlines for May 08, 2025:
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Tibetan Ukay Daily Evening Program - Top Headlines for May 07, 2025:
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Tibetan Ukay Daily Evening Program - Top Headlines for May 06, 2025:
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Tibetan Ukay Daily Evening Program - Top Headlines for May 05, 2025:
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Tibetan Ukay Daily Evening Program - Top Headlines for May 02, 2025:
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Tibetan Ukay Daily Evening Program - Top Headlines for May 01, 2025:
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Tibetan Ukay Daily Evening Program - Top Headlines for April.29, 2025:
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2 On January 7, a 7.1-magnitude earthquake shook Dingri County, Tibet. According to Chinese state media, the earthquake had a magnitude of 6.8 and killed 126 people and injured 337 others. Associate Professor of Geology Ngawang Tendar argues that there may be a political reason for the Chinese government's use of the seismic Richter scale of 6.8, as seismologists consider earthquakes with magnitudes greater than 6.9 to be major earthquakes, and 6.8 and lower to be moderate waves. An interview with Associate Professor Ngawang Tendar, Dalai Lama Institute of Higher Studies, about the earthquake and how Indian and Eurasian plates collide and form earthquakes on the roof of the world, Tibet.
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1 Experts say that a nation's survival depends on preserving its language and culture. In Tibet, the Chinese government has "closed all schools where intensive Tibetan language is taught, and forcefully enrolled all the monks under the age of 18 in government-run boarding schools, where the medium of instruction is Chinese-Mandarin. In conversation with Dolma Tsering, master's degree student at Dalai Lama Institute of Higher Studies, Bengaluru, India.
2 New York City Launches First Tibetan-Language Facebook Page to Support Tibetan Community. The Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA) in New York has launched the country’s first Tibetan-language Facebook page, aimed at providing Tibetan immigrants with access to essential information and resources in their native language. Speaking to RFA, Tenzin Tseyang, a staff member at MOIA, emphasized the broader significance of this initiative. “As an ethnic group striving to preserve our language, this is a crucial step forward. While the Chinese government continues to suppress the Tibetan language inside Tibet through restrictive policies, we in exile are doing everything possible to protect and promote our linguistic heritage,” she said.
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