Meanwhile, soccer star Mesut Ozil, then playing for Arsenal in the English Premier League, found himself at the center of a similar storm the same year when he expressed support for the Muslim Uyghur minority in the Chinese region of Xinjiang, who the United States and others say are victims of a genocide, something Beijing denies. But last year a group of some 50 independent United Nations human rights experts called on China to stop what it said was the repression of its religious and ethnic minorities.
Activists who call for Tibet to be an independent country say that its resources are being exploited by Beijing and its Buddhist religious and cultural heritage erased. China claims that Tibet has been part of its territory for centuries. IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. Kanter has previously been critical of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and the government reportedly revoked his Turkish passport in Skip Navigation.
Markets Pre-Markets U. Key Points. Boston Celtics player Enes Kanter tweeted a video in support of independence for Tibet. Not long after, highlights from the Celtics' game against the Knicks were made unavailable on the Tencent Sports app.
In a video posted on Twitter, Kanter called Chinese president Xi Jinping a "brutal dictator" and said he supports Tibetan people's "cause for freedom. One leg was blown off at the scene, and he's still trying to save the other, but might not win that battle, he said. He's had more skin grafts than he can remember.
She lost both legs and was pushed into court in a wheelchair. Her aide dog, Rescue, lay beside her as she testified. I remember feeling free.
Because she is a nurse, she focused on saving her husband. His foot and part of his leg were hanging by a thread. She remembers screaming, and not being able to hear anything.
This photo was taken before she decided to amputate her second leg in January. I wanted all of those things, and to lose my second leg was a gut-wrenching decision. Rebekah Gregory was celebrating her birthday weekend at the marathon with family and friends. She remembers coming to after the blast and reaching for her 5-year-old son, Noah. She could see bones protruding from her arm. She also lost a leg below the knee.
Like many bomb survivors, she was convinced she was going to die that day. She is using a blade to run again. After she testified, she wrote a note to Dzhokhar Tsarnaev on her Facebook page saying she is not afraid of him. Roseann Sdoia had run a 5K the day before the marathon. She heard the first bomb and decided to run for it. Then she saw two explosions of white light at her feet. She knew she'd lost a leg before she hit the ground.
She saw a severed foot with a sock and remembers asking herself if she wore socks that day. So she willed herself to stay conscious and fight. Jane Richard , in the pink skirt, lost her leg. She holds the hand of her brother Henry as they walk down Boylston Street with their parents and others after an April 15 ceremony this year. She was standing next to her brother Martin behind a metal barricade when the second bomb went off.
Her father, Bill, took one look at Martin, knew he wouldn't make it and focused his efforts on saving Jane. She sang in April at Fenway Park on opening day. Mary Jo White and Bill White , right, had gone with son Kevin into the city for lunch and were on their way back to "the T," as Boston's public transportation system is called, when they decided to stop by the finish line.
They were just feet away from the first bomb. Bill, a veteran who earned a Purple Heart in Vietnam, lost his leg above the knee. Kevin, who serves as the family spokesman, says his parents, who are in their 70s, don't like to talk about the events of April 15, He told his local newspaper he "really has no feelings" for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. Steve Woolfenden , a biomedical researcher, was pushing his son, Leo, in a stroller along Boylston Street.
His wife was running the marathon, and they were making their way to the finish line when the first bomb went off. He started to turn the stroller around in the crowd, but the second blast caught them. Woolfenden's leg was severed on the scene. He could see it still in the boot next to him, the tibia protruding. His focus was on Leo and getting him help. Leo Woolfenden was lifted from his stroller by a first responder as the boy's father lay on the ground with a severed leg. Leo suffered a skull fracture.
Story highlights Three people were killed when two homemade explosives went off at the Boston Marathon One of the victims was Krystle Campbell, 29, who went to the race every year Another was 8-year-old Martin Richard, who was known as bright and energetic One victim was a Chinese national, China's consulate in New York says.
Friends of those killed say they are devastated by the senseless deaths. Here is some of what we know about each of the victims:. Krystle Campbell, 29, Arlington, Massachusetts. Krystle Campbell is second victim killed in Boston bombing. Read More. The family is heartbroken and still in shock, Patty Campbell said as she tried to read a statement on the family's porch.
Everyone loved Krystle, she said. She was always smiling," Patty Campbell said as her son, Billy, clutched her with his right arm.
Krystle's grandmother said the year-old was a special kind of person who nurtured deep friendships.
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