TYC 55th Working Committee Meeting

The 55th Annual Working Committee Meeting (WCM) of the Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) was successfully held in Paonta Sahib from 29 June to 4 July, with the participation of representatives from more than 30 Regional Chapters.

The meeting commenced with an opening ceremony attended by distinguished guests. The Honourable Chief Guest was Home Minister of the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA), Kalon Palden Dhondup. The Guest of Honour was former Health Minister of the Central Tibetan Administration and former Tibetan Youth Congress Central Executive Committee member, Kalon Choekyong Wangchuk. The ceremony was also graced by MLA Shri Sukh Ram Chaudhary.

Following the opening ceremony and the addresses delivered by the dignitaries, the 55th Annual Working Committee Meeting was officially declared open, marking the beginning of several days of discussions, deliberations, and resolutions on matters concerning the organization and its future activities.

During the WCM, members reviewed the organisation’s annual activities, discussed key organisational affairs, adopted important resolutions, and formulated plans for future campaigns and initiatives.

The 55th Annual Working Committee Meeting concluded successfully, owing to the wholehearted support, hospitality, and selfless service of the Paonta Sahib Regional Tibetan Youth Congress (RTYC) and the Regional Tibetan Women’s Association (RTWA). Their dedication, tireless efforts, and spirit of community service played a vital role in ensuring the smooth and successful conduct of the meeting.

 

 

 

Pomegranate Protest: Abolish Ethnic Unity Law

 

On 1 July 2026, as the People’s Republic of China implemented its so-called “Ethnic Unity and Progress Law,” Tibetans around the world stood united in opposition to an unjust law aimed at undermining the distinct identity of the Tibetan people.

During its ongoing 55th Working Committee Meeting, the Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) organized a protest in Dehradun under the banner “POMEGRANATE PROTEST: Abolish the Ethnic Unity Law.” The protest campaign condemned the implementation of the law,  as it is the gravest threats to Tibetan identity, language, culture, and religion in recent decades.

With the Central Executive Committee and representatives from more than 30 Regional Chapters gathered for the 55th Working Committee Meeting, members of the Tibetan Youth Congress came together in a united display of resistance against the law and reaffirmed their commitment to safeguarding the rights and identity of the Tibetan people.

The protest was further strengthened by the participation and solidarity of members from Bharat Seema Jagran Manch, Bharat Tibet Sahyog Manch (BTSM), and Bharat Tibet Mitra, who joined the demonstration in support of the Tibetan cause.

 

TIBETAN YOUTH CONGRESS STATEMENT: 
The Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) strongly condemns the implementation of the so-called People’s Republic of China’s “Ethnic Unity and Progress Law,” which comes into force on the 105th founding anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party. This legislation represents one of the most serious threats to the survival of Tibetan identity in recent decades.
Under Han-dominated leadership, Beijing continues to consolidate its unilateral control by institutionalizing policies aimed at assimilating Tibetans through political repression, cultural interference, economic domination, and coercive state measures. More than six decades after the occupation of Tibet, the Chinese Communist Party has intensified its campaign to Sinicize Tibet under the guise of promoting “ethnic unity.” By advancing a single Han-centric national identity.
The pomegranate metaphor seeks to portray all ethnic groups as inseparable parts of a single Chinese national identity. However, Tibet’s distinct civilization, language, religion, and historical experience cannot be reduced to a seed within another nation’s narrative. True coexistence must be based on respect for identity, not assimilation.
The concerns raised by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and various UN Special Rapporteurs clearly demonstrate that China’s assimilation policies violate internationally recognized human rights standards, including the rights to culture, language, religion, and self-determination.
Therefore, the Tibetan Youth Congress calls upon:
1. The Government of India and democratic nations worldwide to unequivocally condemn China’s forced assimilation policies in Tibet.
2. The United Nations Human Rights Council and its member states to take concrete multilateral action to address the deteriorating human rights situation in Tibet.
3. The People’s Republic of China to immediately abolish the colonial boarding school system and cease all policies aimed at erasing Tibetan identity, language, religion, and culture.
4. The international community, governments, and human rights organizations to closely monitor the implementation of this law and hold the Chinese government accountable for policies that threaten the survival of Tibetan identity and violate internationally recognized human rights norms.
The implementation of this law marks a dangerous turning point in China’s policies toward Tibet. If left unchallenged, it threatens the intergenerational transmission of Tibetan language, religion, and culture, and risks the irreversible destruction of the Tibetan nation’s unique identity and heritage.
The Tibetan Youth Congress unequivocally condemns and rejects this genocide law. As we declared during the Black Hat March Campaign in April, we once again raise our voice in opposition to this assimilationist legislation, which stands in direct contradiction to the principles enshrined in the United Nations Charter, international human rights standards, and fundamental freedoms. Such measures undermine cultural diversity, religious freedom, and the right of communities to preserve, protect, and develop their own identity, language, and way of life.
On this 1 July, Tibetans across the world stand united in defense of our identity, culture, and fundamental rights, as well as our collective aspiration for a Free and Independent Tibet. We call upon global leaders, democratic governments, human rights defenders, and people of conscience everywhere to stand in solidarity with Tibet and resist all attempts to erase the identity, dignity, and existence of the Tibetan people. The struggle for Tibet is not only a struggle for one nation—it is a struggle for justice, human dignity, cultural survival, and the universal right of all peoples to live freely and determine their own future.
“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly.” –   Martin Luther King Jr., Letter from the Birmingham Jail

Statement by the Tibetan Youth Congress on the Visit of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi to India for the 18th BRICS Summit

As Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi visits India in connection with the 18th BRICS Summit and discussions on Sino-Indian border issues, the Tibetan Youth Congress reiterates that the People’s Republic of China cannot credibly claim global leadership while continuing its occupation of Tibet and repression of the Tibetan people.

As India hosts the summit under the theme, “Building for Resilience, Innovation, Cooperation and Sustainability,” we urge leaders to recognize that genuine regional stability and cooperation cannot be achieved without addressing the unresolved issue of Tibet.

The question of Tibet remains one of decolonization, international peace, and justice. The ongoing Sino-Indian border dispute is a direct consequence of China’s occupation of Tibet, and no lasting solution can be achieved without addressing its root cause.

The Tibetan Youth Congress calls upon the Government of India, democratic nations, and the international community to support the Tibetan people’s inalienable right to self-determination and their aspiration for a Free and Independent Tibet. We further urge world leaders to ensure that human rights, freedom, and justice remain central to all engagement with China.

A Free Tibet is essential not only for the survival of the Tibetan nation and its unique cultural heritage, but also for lasting peace, stability, and security across Asia.

statement (Eng)  statement (Tib)

Passing of Tibet’s Hero and Former Tibetan Youth Congress President Lhasang Tsering la

 

On June 11, 2026, at 2:22 PM, the Tibetan Youth Congress received the deeply heartbreaking news of the passing of our former President and revered Tibetan independence activist, Gen Lhasang Tsering la, at Jampa Ling Senior Care Home in Dharamshala. We are profoundly grieved by this immense loss and mourn the passing of a courageous leader, a devoted patriot, and an unwavering champion of Tibet’s freedom struggle.

Gen Lhasang Tsering la dedicated his entire life to the cause of a Free and Independent Tibet. During some of the most critical and challenging periods in our nation’s history, he stood firmly at the forefront of the Tibetan freedom movement, fearlessly confronting the Chinese Communist regime and tirelessly advocating for the rights and aspirations of the Tibetan people. Through his leadership, writings, activism, and unwavering commitment to the Tibetan cause, he inspired generations of Tibetans to continue the struggle with courage and conviction.

His contributions to the Tibetan Youth Congress, the Tibetan freedom movement, and the Tibetan exile community are immeasurable. His steadfast dedication, principled leadership, and uncompromising commitment to the cause of Tibetan independence have left an indelible mark on our movement and our nation.

Today, we mourn not only the loss of a former President, but also the loss of one of Tibet’s most devoted sons. As we remember his extraordinary life and legacy, we offer our deepest prayers and respects. May his noble aspirations continue to guide us, and may he swiftly take rebirth to once again serve Tibet’s religion, nation, and people.

The Tibetan Youth Congress bows its head in grief and gratitude before the memory of Gen Lhasang Tsering la. His legacy will forever remain a source of inspiration in our continued struggle for a Free and Independent Tibet.

 

 

རང་བཙན་གྱི་གཅིག་པུར་རྒྱུག་པའི་དཔའ་བོ།
༼ལྷ་བཟང་ཚེ་རིང་གི་རྗེས་དྲན་དུ།༽
གཞོན་ནུའི་སྙིང་སྟོབས་བཙན་པོའི་རང་བཞིན་ཅན། །
འཁྱོག་པོའི་ཞི་བདེའི་ལམ་ལ་མ་ཆགས་པར། །
གསང་བའི་དམག་སྒར་གཏུམ་པོའི་དཔུང་ནས་ཀྱང་། །
རྒྱལ་ཁབ་རང་བཙན་བགྲོད་ལམ་ཉིད་དུ་བསྙེགས། །
འཛམ་གླིང་སྤྱན་གྱིས་གཟིགས་པའི་རིག་པ་རྣོ། །
སྤྱང་གྲུང་འཛོམས་པའི་རྒྱལ་གཅེས་དཔའ་བོ་མཆོག །
སློབ་གྲྭའི་ར་བ་ཉིད་ནས་ས་བོན་བསྐྲུན། །
བཙན་བྱོལ་ཟུག་རྔུའི་ཁྲོད་དུ་རེ་བ་སྦྱིན། །
སྣར་ཐང་པར་ཁང་ལྕགས་པར་འོད་སྣང་ལས། །
བཙན་གནོན་འོག་གི་བདེན་པའི་སྐད་སྒྲ་དཔར། །
གཞོན་ནུ་ལྷན་ཚོགས་དབུ་ཁྲིད་མགོན་གྱུར་ནས། །
བོད་ཀྱི་སྤོབས་པའི་དར་ཆ་མཐོན་པོར་བསྒྲེངས། །
ཞིབ་འཇུག་ལས་ལ་ཕོགས་ཐོབ་མ་གཉེར་བར། །
བྱང་ལམ་ཉི་མའི་གྲིབ་བསིལ་འོག་ཏུ་བཞུགས། །
དཔའ་བོའི་སྨྱུག་རྩེ་སྐྱོན་བརྗོད་ལྕེ་ལས་ནི། །
གཙང་མའི་རང་བཙན་གླུ་དབྱངས་སྙན་པོར་བླངས། །
ཉེན་ཁ་ཆེ་བའི་འགག་འཕྲང་མི་ཚེའི་ནང་། །
གཞན་དག་ཤེལ་བཞིན་ཆག་ཀྱང་འགྱུར་མེད་ལངས། །
གོང་མའི་ཕྱག་གི་བཀུར་བཟོས་མཐོན་པོ་ཡིས། །
གཅེས་པའི་ཕ་ཡུལ་དོན་དུ་ཞབས་ཞུས་བསྒྲུབས། །
དོན་སྙིང་ལྡན་པའི་བུ་མཆོག་སྙིང་སྟོབས་ཅན། །
སྔོན་གྱི་དམ་བཅའ་ཉིད་ལ་དྲང་བདེན་མཛད། །
བསྔགས་བརྗོད་གུས་འདུད་མེ་ཏོག་གཏོར་བ་ནི། །
ཞུམ་པ་མེད་པའི་གཏན་གྱི་སྲུང་མ་ལའོ། །
by Thupten Ciren Jr.

TYC President Participates in Monthly Protest Campaign in New York

The President of the Tibetan Youth Congress participated in the monthly protest campaign organized by the Regional Tibetan Youth Congress New York & New Jersey near the Chinese Consulate in New York. The demonstration was held in remembrance of March 10, the anniversary of the 1959 Tibetan National Uprising.

Addressing the gathering, the TYC President spoke about the current situation inside Tibet and emphasized the importance of strengthening the Tibetan freedom movement. He urged Tibetans in the diaspora to play a more active role in supporting the Tibetan cause and to work collectively to raise international awareness about the ongoing challenges faced by the Tibetan people under Chinese occupation.

The President also called upon the so-called Chinese government to repeal the so-called “Ethnic Unity Law,” expressing serious concerns over its impact on Tibetan identity, language, culture, and religious freedom. He noted that such policies further undermine the fundamental rights of Tibetans and accelerate efforts to assimilate Tibetans into the dominant Chinese cultural framework.

The monthly campaign reaffirmed the unwavering commitment of Tibetan activists and supporters to advocating for the rights, freedom, and self-determination of the Tibetan people through peaceful and nonviolent means.

Meeting with East Turkistan Government-in-Exile in Washington, D.C.

On June 9, 2026, at 5:30 PM, the President of the Tibetan Youth Congress, together with the Presidents of the Regional Tibetan Youth Congress chapters of New York–New Jersey and Minnesota, as well as former TYC member Yeshi Tenzin la, held a meeting with Mr. Salih Hudayar, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Security of the East Turkistan Government-in-Exile, at its office in Washington, D.C.

During the meeting, both sides engaged in discussions on strengthening relations and enhancing cooperation between the Tibetan Youth Congress and the East Turkistan movement. The discussions focused on expanding collaboration, fostering mutual support, raising international awareness of the challenges faced by the Tibetan and Uyghur peoples, and coordinating advocacy efforts concerning human rights, freedom, and the right to self-determination.

The meeting reaffirmed the shared commitment of both parties to maintaining continued dialogue and cooperation in pursuit of their respective aspirations for a free and independent Tibet and East Turkistan.

EDUCATIONAL VISIT BY FOUNDATION FOR UNIVERSAL RESPONSIBILITY’S GURUKUL PROGRAM

Mr. Tenzin Legmon, Senior Program Manager at the Foundation for Universal Responsibility, along with Programme Associate Ms. Shriya Raina, led a group of young researchers and students from various Indian states participating in the Gurukul Program on a two-week visit to Dharamshala. As part of their educational engagement, the group visited the Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) office to learn about Tibetan civil society organizations and their work.

Mr. Tenzin Lobsang, General Secretary of the Tibetan Youth Congress, together with representatives from the Tibetan Women’s Association (TWA), the Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy (TCHRD), and Students for a Free Tibet–India (SFT-India), provided presentations on their respective organizations, highlighting their missions, activities, and contributions to the Tibetan freedom movement and community development. The presentations were followed by an engaging question-and-answer session, enabling participants to gain deeper insight into the role of Tibetan civil society in preserving Tibetan identity, promoting unity, and advocating for the Tibetan cause.

 

The Tibetan Youth Congress, on behalf of the participating Tibetan civil society organizations, expressed sincere appreciation to the Foundation for Universal Responsibility for organizing this annual initiative, which enables students and young researchers from India to engage with Tibetan institutions and gain a deeper understanding of the Tibetan people’s aspirations and challenges.


Participating in 2026 Tibet Lobby Day

On 8–9 June 2026, Mr. Tsering Chomphel, President of the Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC), participated in the 2026 Tibet Lobby Day organized by the International Campaign for Tibet in Washington, D.C., alongside representatives from the Regional Tibetan Youth Congress chapters of New York–New Jersey and Minnesota.
Prior to the lobbying activities, the President of the Tibetan Youth Congress visited the Office of Tibet in Washington, D.C., and met with Dr. Namgyal Choedup, Representative of the Office of Tibet for North America. During the meeting, they discussed the ongoing activities of the Tibetan Youth Congress in the United States and explored future initiatives to strengthen advocacy efforts for Tibet.
As part of Tibet Lobby Day, the Tibetan Youth Congress delegation visited the offices of several members of the United States Congress, including James P. McGovern (Massachusetts), Michael T. McCaul (Texas), Scott Perry (Pennsylvania), Pramila Jayapal (Washington), Rick Scott (Florida), and Jeff Merkley (Oregon).
On behalf of the Tibetan Youth Congress, letters were submitted to the Representatives and Senators expressing gratitude for their continued support on the Tibetan freedom movement. The delegation also presented a letter highlighting the ongoing urgent situation inside Tibet and outlining six key concerns requiring international attention.
The Tibetan Youth Congress particularly expressed its appreciation to Senator Rick Scott and Senator Jeff Merkley for observing TYC Martyrs’ Day on 29 April and for introducing the Tibet Atrocities Determination Act. The delegation also thanked Representative James P. McGovern and Representative Michael T. McCaul for introducing the Assuring the Future of Tibet Act of 2026 (H.R. 8982), which reaffirms support for the Tibetan people’s right to determine their own future.
The delegation attended an evening reception hosted by the International Campaign for Tibet at the Russell Senate Office Building, where they met members of the Tibetan community residing across the United States. During the reception, the delegation also had the opportunity to meet Nancy Pelosi, a longstanding supporter of the Tibetan cause and a close friend of His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama. The event provided an important platform for strengthening partnerships and advancing advocacy efforts on behalf of Tibet.
On 9 June, a dinner gathering was hosted by the Regional Tibetan Youth Congress Washington, D.C. Working Committee, former Central Executive members of the Tibetan Youth Congress, and local TYC members residing in the Washington, D.C. area. The gathering provided an opportunity for meaningful discussions on activism, advocacy strategies, and the history of TYC’s campaigns in the Tibetan freedom struggle.
The Tibetan Youth Congress extends its heartfelt gratitude to former TYC Central Executive member Yeshi Tenzin la for his generous financial support during the Washington, D.C. Lobby Day, his active participation in the lobbying efforts, and for sharing his valuable experiences and insights.
The Tibetan Youth Congress also expresses its sincere appreciation to the International Campaign for Tibet for providing the opportunity to participate in the 2026 Tibet Lobby Day. Special thanks are extended to RTYC Washington, D.C. President Youdon la, Gen Sonam, and Rinzin Choedon for their warm hospitality and for accommodating the TYC President and representatives from RTYC New York–New Jersey and RTYC Minnesota during their stay in Washington, D.C.
The Tibetan Youth Congress considers the 2026 Tibet Lobby Day a fruitful and successful initiative that strengthened engagement with U.S. lawmakers, amplified awareness of the ongoing situation inside Tibet, and reaffirmed international support for the just cause of Tibet and the Tibetan people. Through continued advocacy and international engagement, the Tibetan Youth Congress remains committed to advancing the Tibetan people’s struggle for freedom and justice.

Election and Oath-Taking Ceremony of the 19th Working Committee of RTYC New York & New Jersey

On 31 May 2026, under the leadership of the Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC), the election for the 19th Working Committee of the Regional Tibetan Youth Congress (RTYC) New York & New Jersey was successfully conducted.

Following the election, sincere appreciation and gratitude were extended to the members of the 18th Working Committee of RTYC New York & New Jersey for their dedicated service, tireless efforts, and valuable contributions to the Tibetan freedom movement. Their commitment to community engagement and activism has significantly strengthened the organization and advanced the collective cause of Tibet. Particular appreciation was extended to the outgoing committee for their steadfast commitment to organizing the 10th March Memorial Campaign every month throughout their tenure, ensuring that the spirit of remembrance, resistance, and advocacy for Tibet remained strong within the community.

On 7 June 2026, the Oath-Taking Ceremony of the newly elected 19th Working Committee was held under the leadership of Mr. Tsering Chomphel, President of the Tibetan Youth Congress. During the ceremony, the newly elected members formally pledged their commitment to upholding the aims and objectives of the organization and to serving the Tibetan cause with dedication and integrity.

The Tibetan Youth Congress Centrex warmly welcomes the newly elected members of the 19th Working Committee of RTYC New York & New Jersey and extends its heartfelt congratulations.

Tibetan Youth Congress Congratulates Newly Elected Leadership of the Central Tibetan Administration

On June 4, the Tibetan Youth Congress Centrex Executive members visited Gangchen Kyishong, the administrative headquarters of the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) in Dharamshala. During the visit, they first met Hon’ble Sikyong Penpa Tsering to extend congratulations on his re-election for a second consecutive term as the 17th Sikyong.

Following this, they met Speaker of the Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile, Madam Dolma Tsering Teykhang, the first woman to hold the position of Speaker of the Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile and Deputy Speaker Ven. Sonam Tenphel to convey their greetings and appreciation on their respective appointments and continued service.

Later, the executives met the newly elected Kalons of the 17th Kashag, nominated by the Sikyong and successfully elected, and extended best wishes for their tenure in service of Tibet’s religion, governance, and people.

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