China Deploys Military Veterans In Kindergartens And Schools In Tibet: Exclusive

2 hours ago

Last Updated:September 15, 2025, 12:14 IST

The pilot programme, which began with 13 veterans stationed at seven schools in Nagchu, represents Beijing's most direct militarisation yet of Tibetan education

rapid read outer logo

The new programme features school-based military instructors teaching in primary and secondary schools, as well as kindergartens in Sernye District in Nagchu in the Tibet Autonomous Region. (AP File for representation)

The new programme features school-based military instructors teaching in primary and secondary schools, as well as kindergartens in Sernye District in Nagchu in the Tibet Autonomous Region. (AP File for representation)

China has launched a new pilot programme deploying Chinese military veterans in state-run boarding schools to indoctrinate Tibetan children as young as four with military training and political education, according to Tibet Watch report, exclusively accessed by News18.

The pilot programme, which began with 13 veterans stationed at seven schools in Nagchu, represents Beijing’s most direct militarisation yet of Tibetan education, targeting children at their most impressionable age in a region already subjected to intense surveillance, language restrictions and forced cultural transformation.

State-run TV depicted Tibetan children marching in fatigues, raising the red flag on a parade ground, and practising diving for cover under their desks with notebooks on their heads in a ‘civil defence’ drill. Kindergarten children are shown listening to ‘red stories’ that glorify the achievements of the People’s Liberation Army and emphasise loyalty to Xi Jinping and the Communist Party.

The new programme features school-based military instructors teaching in primary and secondary schools, as well as kindergartens in Sernye District in Nagchu (Chinese: Naqu) in the Tibet Autonomous Region, an area that has been subjected to a deepening crackdown particularly since periods of courageous Tibetan resistance in 2013 and earlier.

State media coverage

The programme is an outcome of the recently amended Defense Education Law, which was passed by the People’s Congress Standing Committee, China’s top legislature, and came into effect in September 2024.

In December, temperatures fall to minus 20 in Nagchu before dawn, when soldiers are depicted in state media coverage waking up children to raise the Party flag at Sernye District No. 2 (Hangjia) Middle School – a ceremony described as “the most solemn" in the school. A young boy who is part of the newly formed Flag Guard is cited as saying that the military instructors “are very strict with us".

A Tibetan mother, noticeably nervous, appears in the official documentary about the pilot programme praising the military teachers and saying that her children have shown improvement in their discipline and motivation. Pema Tashi, a Tibetan military instructor stationed at Kindergarten No. 5, said that the soldiers’ emphasis on ‘red’ education was “taking root in young minds…like seeds sown quietly".

The aim of the military veterans in schools programme is not only to intensify Sinicisation and indoctrinate a new generation, but also to prepare Tibetan youth for military service. Tibetans are increasingly regarded as an asset to the People’s Liberation Army for mountain warfare close to the border with India given their adaptation to the high altitude of the plateau. Beijing has stepped up its efforts to recruit Tibetans in the PLA, offering incentives to those willing to join. Eighteen to 21-year-old Tibetan students are offered reimbursement of their school fees in exchange for enrolling in a two-year course of military training. Students already receiving state aid for their schooling were required to enroll, according to a Chinese government notice.

The objectives

This objective was underlined in a series of military camps for children this year, including a training session for 100 Tibetan teenagers from Lhasa middle and senior schools described in official media as “Building Dreams on the Snowy Frontier, Setting Sail for Young Military Spirits". The teenagers were depicted in combat fatigues studying how to load guns and march with the red flag. Slogans adorned the walls of the camp, including “Love the Army and Master the Martial Arts" and “Tibetan compatriots welcome the 18th Army to Tibet". The 18th Army of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) was ordered to enter Tibet in 1950 as part of a larger military campaign, including the battle of Chamdo (Qamdo/Changdu), of particular strategic importance to Beijing. The Communist authorities gained control of central Tibet when Chamdo, eastern Tibet’s provincial capital, fell to the People’s Liberation Army on October 7, 1950.

The new pilot programme underscores the Chinese government’s drive to integrate national defense education and patriotic education into the daily curriculum of state-run boarding schools in Tibet amid growing concerns over the erosion of Tibetan-medium education under China’s bilingual education, and a heightened emphasis on China’s control over its borders with neighbouring countries including India, Nepal, and Bhutan.

Xi Jinping’s policy

According to a Tibetan and Chinese language official news from March 2025, the pilot programme follows a 2022 directive jointly issued by China’s Ministry of Veterans Affairs, Ministry of Education, and Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security.

The joint directive states that the program aims to “thoroughly implement Xi Jinping’s important expositions on education and veterans’ work, further broaden employment channels for veterans, and strengthen the construction of teacher’s teams of primary and secondary schools."

Tibet Watch has reported before on military camps for teenagers in Nyingtri (Linzhi, Nyingchi) close to the heavily militarized border with India’s Arunachal Pradesh, and in Nagchu, where students received lectures on “national defence education knowledge and military doctrine, as well as school rules and regulations".

Xi Jinping has called on China’s border troops to forge a “great wall of steel" along the country’s borders by enhancing their capabilities in frontier defence and control. Underlining the imperative of securitisation which now dominates every CCP policy, Xi says that “We must adhere to our strategic thinking that to govern the nation, we must first govern our borders, to govern our borders, we must first stabilize Tibet."

Reflecting the priorities of the top Party leadership and unlike his predecessors, Xi has made a number of visits to troops in border regions, including an inspection tour to Nyingtri (Chinese: Nyingchi) in the TAR in 2021, located in a strategically important area bordering Arunachal Pradesh in India. The administrative seat of Nyingtri is called Bayi in Chinese, meaning ‘eight one’, a reference to the PLA’s creation on 1 August 1927.

The PLA’s Western Theatre Command (WTC) is the largest of China’s five Theatre Commands and exercises operational jurisdiction over the country’s borders with India and Afghanistan. Since military manoeuvres against India in 2020, China has raised its grading among Theatre Commands and brought the WTC on par with the Eastern Theatre Command, which is ranked first in terms of priority for receiving new aircraft and weaponry.

The military veterans in schools programme is consistent with the emphasis made by Tibet Autonomous Region Party chief Wang Junzheng on shaping young minds to be loyal to the Party, involving the strengthening of ideological education and instilling the ethos of “love the Party, love the country" in children.

Manoj Gupta

Manoj Gupta

Group Editor, Investigations & Security Affairs, Network18

Group Editor, Investigations & Security Affairs, Network18

First Published:

September 15, 2025, 12:14 IST

News world China Deploys Military Veterans In Kindergartens And Schools In Tibet: Exclusive

Disclaimer: Comments reflect users’ views, not News18’s. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Read More

Read Full Article at Source