The Tibet Autonomous Region is an area where Tibetan people
live in concentrated communities, constituting more than
95 percent of the population of the region. In Tibet, the
spoken and written Tibetan language is universally used.
In accordance with the stipulations of the Constitution
and the Law on Ethnic Regional Autonomy, the Tibet Autonomous
Region has paid great attention to maintaining and safeguarding
the Tibetan people's right to study, use and develop their
spoken and written language.
It promulgated and implemented Some Provisions of the Tibet
Autonomous Region on the Study, Use and Development of the
Spoken and Written Tibetan Language (Draft) and the Rules
for the Implementation of "Some Provisions of the Tibet
Autonomous Region on the Study, Use and Development of the
Spoken and Written Tibetan Language (Draft)" in 1987
and 1988, respectively. These two laws put the work related
to the study, use and development of the spoken and written
Tibetan language on a legal track. The governments at all
levels in Tibet have implemented the provisions on protecting
and developing the spoken and written Tibetan language according
to law, safeguarding the Tibetan people's right to study
and use their native language, and making the language develop
continuously together with the development of politics,
economy and culture.
The spoken and written Tibetan language is widely used
in every aspect of social life in Tibet. Since the Democratic
Reform in 1959, the Tibetan and Han Chinese languages have
been used for all the resolutions, laws and regulations
adopted by the People's Congress of the Tibet Autonomous
Region, and the official documents and proclamations issued
by the governments at all levels or their departments in
Tibet. In judicial proceedings, the spoken and written Tibetan
language is used in trying cases and in the relevant legal
documents if the litigant participants are Tibetans. Both
the Tibetan and Han Chinese languages are used for all work
units' official seals, certificates, forms, stationery,
and signs, and signboards of institutions, factories, mines,
schools, railway stations, airports, stores and shops, hotels,
cinemas, theaters and gymnasiums, street and road signs,
and traffic signs.
At present, the radio and TV stations in the Tibet Autonomous
Region broadcast in the Tibetan language for over 20 hours
per day.
On October 1, 1999, the Tibet Television started its satellite
broadcasting channel, which broadcast telefilms and other
programs in the Tibetan language every day. The cinema is
oriented toward grassroots and farming and pastoral areas,
guaranteeing that at least 25 movies newly dubbed into the
Tibetan language are shown in the various places in Tibet
every year. Meanwhile, the publication of Tibetan books,
magazines and newspapers has made rapid progress. Since
1989 alone, 441 titles of books have been published in the
Tibetan language, of which many have won domestic or international
awards. There are altogether 14 magazines and 10 newspapers
published in the Tibetan language in Tibet. The Tibetan
edition of the Tibet Daily is published every day, with
a large number of articles and news dispatches written or
edited in the Tibetan language directly. The newspaper has
said good-bye to sort typesetting by investing a considerable
sum of money to establish Tibetan computer editing and typesetting
systems. Both Tibet Science and Technology News and Tibet
Scientific and Technological Information have their Tibetan-language
editions, which are very popular among the farmers and herdsmen.
All the art troupes in Tibet create programs and perform
in the Tibetan language.
The study of the Tibetan language is protected by law.
Educational institutions in the Tibet Autonomous Region
universally practice a bilingual educational system whereby
teaching is done principally in the Tibetan language. Furthermore,
the teaching and reference materials for all the courses
from primary school to senior high school have been edited
in or translated into the Tibetan language.
As the times progress and society advances, the Tibetan
language develops in tandem, with its vocabulary and grammar
continuously enriched. Much headway has been made in the
normalization of technical terms and standardization of
information technology in the Tibetan language. The encoded
Tibetan language has been formally recognized by the Chinese
state and international standards, and the promotion of
the Tibetan language as an Internet communication tool is
proceeding apace.