Visitors recount Tibet violence, tell of troops
By John Ruwitch
CHENGDU, China (Reuters) - Lhasa is silent.
With troops and anti-riot vehicles the army has imposed control after a day of chaos and violence in the sun-soaked capital of the Chinese-controlled region of Tibet, normally bustling with tourists and Buddhist pilgrims.
"Today Lhasa is completely closed and there is Chinese military all over," said 58-year-old Danish tourist Bente Walle.
"It looked like a ghost town."
Other foreign visitors said the same about Lhasa, which has been racked by the biggest protests in two decades. The government has announced 10 deaths.
On Friday afternoon, when the protests turned violent, the silver-haired Walle was walking with a guide near the world famous Potala Palace, the empty winter home of the Dalai Lama who has been living in exile since 1959 after a failed uprising.
The first sign of trouble was fire from the Tromsikhang market nearby, Walle said.
"I just saw a lot of fire and everybody was running and my guide told me: 'We've got to run.' So we ran," she said after her flight out touched down in the early afternoon in the southwestern city of Chengdu, the main point of entry for most people going into the Himalayan region. Continued...















