Zhukang Tubdan Kezhub (R), a living Buddha from Tibet, vice chairman of the Tibet regional committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), and vice-chairman of the Tibetan branch of the Buddhism Association of Chinain Lhasa, speaks to reporters during an interview with overseas journalists in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, on March 28, 2008. (Xinhua Photo)
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Journalists work in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, on March 28, 2008. Top buddhas of the region met with the oversease journalists on Friday. (Xinhua Photo)
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Two journalists from Hong Kong work at Yishion clothing store where five sales assistants were burned to death in an arson attack by the rioters in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 27, 2008. A tour by overseas reporters to cover the aftermath of the Lhasa riot went on as scheduled on Thursday. The reporters, from 19 media organizations including the U.S.-based Associated Press, Britain's Financial Times and the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong, were touring the Tibetan capital on a three-day trip in Lhasa following the riot on March 14. (Xinhua Photo)
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Tang Qingyan, a functionary in Yishion clothing store where five sales assistants were burned to death in an arson attack by the rioters, tells the details of the atrocity as overseas journalists listen during an interview in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 27, 2008. A tour by overseas reporters to cover the aftermath of the Lhasa riot went on as scheduled on Thursday. The reporters, from 19 media organizations including the U.S.-based Associated Press, Britain's Financial Times and the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong, were touring the Tibetan capital on a three-day trip in Lhasa following the riot on March 14.(Xinhua Photo)
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Two journalists with Al Jazeera work in a debris left after the riots in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 27, 2008. A tour by overseas reporters to cover the aftermath of the Lhasa riot went on as scheduled on Thursday. The reporters, from 19 media organizations including the U.S.-based Associated Press, Britain's Financial Times and the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong, were touring the Tibetan capital on a three-day trip in Lhasa following the riot on March 14.(Xinhua Photo)
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Degyi Zhoiyar, a teacher with Lhasa No. 2 Middle School, tells how her school buildings were torched during the riot as overseas journalists listen during an interview in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 27, 2008. A tour by overseas reporters to cover the aftermath of the Lhasa riot went on as scheduled on Thursday. The reporters, from 19 media organizations including the U.S.-based Associated Press, Britain's Financial Times and the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong, were touring the Tibetan capital on a three-day trip in Lhasa following the riot on March 14. (Xinhua Photo)
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Yangzhoen (C), a clerk with a Bank of China outlet that was smashed during the riot, answers overseas journalists' questions during an interview in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 27, 2008. A tour by overseas reporters to cover the aftermath of the Lhasa riot went on as scheduled on Thursday. The reporters, from 19 media organizations including the U.S.-based Associated Press, Britain's Financial Times and the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong, were touring the Tibetan capital on a three-day trip in Lhasa following the riot on March 14. (Xinhua Photo)
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An overseas journalist shoots video clips in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 27, 2008. A tour by overseas reporters to cover the aftermath of the Lhasa riot went on as scheduled on Thursday. The reporters, from 19 media organizations including the U.S.-based Associated Press, Britain's Financial Times and the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong, were touring the Tibetan capital on a three-day trip in Lhasa following the riot on March 14.(Xinhua Photo)
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Gesang, a local hotel manager, answers overseas journalists' questions during an interview in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous Region, March 27, 2008. A tour by overseas reporters to cover the aftermath of the Lhasa riot went on as scheduled on Thursday. The reporters, from 19 media organizations including the U.S.-based Associated Press, Britain's Financial Times and the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong, were touring the Tibetan capital on a three-day trip in Lhasa following the riot on March 14. (Xinhua Photo)
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