24 November 2012 Last updated at 00:34 GMT
As China 's new leaders prepared to take the reins
of power earlier this month in Beijing ,
a shocking event was unfolding 2,000
km away.
In the mountainous region of western Sichuan , on the Tibetan
plateau, three teenage Tibetan monks set themselves on fire on the eve of the
Communist Party congress.
According to London-based activist
group Free Tibet, the monks called for freedom in Tibet and the return of the exiled
spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama. The youngest monk, a 15-year-old, died from
his injuries.
Since 2011, over 70 Tibetans have set
themselves on fire.
But during the 18th Party Congress -
which approved China 's
once-in-a-decade leadership change - none of the country's top leaders spoke
about the protests.
“Start Quote
The Dalai Lama group are
using these people, and they have no concern for the advancements we made in
living standards, improving facilities and making more and more people content
and happy”
Qiangba PuncogTibet
deputy party chief
"The Chinese authorities seem to
be playing down this issue, especially domestically," says Robert Barnett,
the director of the Modern Tibet Studies Programme at Columbia
University in New York .
"This represents a crisis in China 's Tibet policy, and they must be
reluctant for that to become apparent."
'Desperation'
In the 1950s, Beijing
reasserted control in Tibet .
Previously, the Tibetans had largely governed themselves. It was during this
period the Dalai Lama fled into exile in India .
In 2008, there were violent protests in
the city of Lhasa
which quickly spread across the region. They were quelled by the Chinese
authorities.
But last year, trouble flared once
again when Tibetans - mainly monks and nuns - began setting themselves on fire
in protest against what they see as political and religious repression. It has
now become a disturbing trend.
Many of the self-immolations have taken
place in western Sichuan ,
a mountainous area with a large Tibetan population, which until a few years ago
had been relatively quiet. There have also been large-scale protests.
But the Tibetan blogger, Tsering
Woeser, scours the internet for information.
She is routinely harassed by the
Chinese authorities and told the BBC that she was told to leave Beijing in August ahead
of the Communist Party Congress. She is currently in Lhasa .
Ms Woeser told the BBC that there was
growing desperation among Tibetans and that was why so many were prepared to
set themselves on fire. She said that the security measures put in place by the
Chinese authorities were making the situation worse.
Earlier this month the top human rights
official at the United Nations, Navi Pillay, said she was disturbed by reports
of detentions, disappearances and the excessive use of force against peaceful
demonstrators.
During the party congress, Qiangba
Puncog, legislature chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region, while expressing
sympathy for those who set themselves on fire, denounced the Dalai Lama.
"They are political victims,"
he said. "The Dalai Lama group are using these people. They have no
concern for the advancements we made in living standards, improving facilities
and making more and more people content and happy."
'Great courage'
The Dalai
Lama: Too early to say whether Xi Jinping will change policy
Nonetheless the authorities appear
unable to end the protests. The question now is whether there will be a change
in direction under the leadership of Xi Jinping.
Xi Jinping's father, Xi Zhongxun, was a
former senior leader well known for pursuing a more conciliatory approach
towards the Tibetans.
In a recent BBC interview, the Dalai
Lama said they were on "friendly terms" and that he had even given Xi
Zhongxun a watch. He said it was too early to say whether his son would change
policy.
But
even if Xi Jinping wanted to change direction he would have to tackle a vast
security and government apparatus that has been geared up to deal with the
Tibet issue, says Bi Yantao, a professor at Hainan University.
Prof
Bi says it is clear that the Tibetan government-in-exile is using Western media
to pressure Beijing .
But
he believes that both sides need to show more flexibility, describing the
current situation as "deadlock."
Robert Barnett says there are
suggestions that Xi Jinping has set an internal team to review Tibet policy
and believes the possibility of a change in policy cannot be ruled out.
"It will take great courage, Xi
Jinping will have to overcome heavy internal resistance," he says.
"Any change is likely to seem small from an outsider's perspective.
"But in the current situation,
even a slight change would have a significant effect among at least some of the
Tibetan community in Tibet ."