Released – Phuntsog Nyidron

On February 26, 2004, Phuntsog Nyidron was freed. Her release came one year before the end of her 16-year prison term. Phuntsog’s release marked a major victory: she was the last of a group of nuns known as the “Drapchi 14” to be released, a group of 14 nuns who received sentence extensions while in prison for recording a tape of freedom songs and smuggling it out of prison. On March 15, 2006, two years after her release from Drapchi Prison, Phunstog Nyidron arrived in the United States and was released to the care of the International Campaign for Tibet.
- Phuntsog Nyidron Released From Prison
- ‘Song of Sadness’ from Drapchi prison: the official Chinese verdict on the Drapchi ‘singing nuns’
- Statement by Phuntsog Nyidron
- Phuntsog Nyidron, last of the ‘Drapchi singing nuns’, arrives in US
Released – Ngawang Sangdrol

After intense pressure from people and governments around the world, she was released in October, 2002, 9 years before the end of her 21-year sentence. In April, 2003, she was released to the United States for medical treatment. She is now living in Washington, DC working as Human Rights Analyst of ICT.
For more information about Ngwang Sandrol’s remarkable story and how ICT obtained her release, please view the award winning television documentary Tibet: Beyond Fear.
Released – Takna Jigme Sangpo
Takna Jigme Sangpo was detained in 1983 at age 57. Sangpo, an elderly former school teacher, was serving a 28-year sentence for “spreading and inciting counterrevolutionary propaganda,” the longest term in a Chinese prison as a political prisoner. He had been harshly treated for demonstrations and hunger strikes within prison. His combined sentence, including 13 years previously served, was 41 years. After his release on medical parole in 2002, Sangpo has spoken at various forums on the issue of Tibet and human rights in China.
Released – Ngawang Choephel
