Tibetan environmental activist A-Nya Sengdra released after years in prison
Feb 10, 2026
Dharamshala (Himachal Pradesh) [India], February 10 : Tibetan environmental defender A-Nya Sengdra has been released after years of being imprisoned.
The 55-year-old returned to his family residence in Rakyang Village in Gade County, Golog, but uncertainty hangs over his physical condition and the extent to which authorities will allow him to travel or speak freely, as reported by Phayul.
According to Phayul, his imprisonment had initially been scheduled to end in September 2025. Officials, however, accused him of infractions committed during detention and pushed back his release date to February 2026.
His freedom this week follows that controversial extension, raising fresh questions among rights observers about punitive administrative practices used against Tibetan activists.
A-Nya Sengdra earned recognition across the region for exposing alleged corruption, misuse of relief money, illegal resource extraction and environmental degradation. His efforts to confront local authorities over discrimination and the marginalisation of nomadic Tibetans won him admiration at the grassroots level. At the same time, these actions brought heavy retaliation from the state.
His clashes with the authorities stretch back more than a decade. Detained in 2014, he served over a year in prison before being released in 2016. Another arrest followed in 2018 under accusations tied to "social stability".
In December 2019, a court handed him a seven-year term, citing charges including inciting unrest and organising gatherings that were said to disturb public order, as highlighted by Phayul.
International campaigners reacted cautiously to news of his release, maintaining that freedom after a prolonged and disputed incarceration does not correct the injustice of the original verdict.
Advocacy networks have long argued that his prosecution symbolises the wider pressures faced by Tibetans who challenge official misconduct or environmental exploitation. Over time, UN human rights experts and Tibetan groups repeatedly called for due process and unconditional release, as reported by Phayul.