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China not worthy to re-enter UN rights body, says Tibetan rights group
Phayul[Monday, May 11, 2009 15:03]
by Tenzin Tsering

Dharamsala, May 10 - The Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy based here said that China is attempting to ‘whitewash’ its tainted human rights record by seeking reelection to the United Nations Human Rights Council.

China will contest the election of the UN Human Rights Council on May 12 when 18 nations will become members of the council.

The Tibetan human rights monitoring agency said China as a state has failed “miserably in terms of its human rights record in the whole of China and particularly in Tibet.”

“This failure is clearly evident in Tibet in light of the Tibetan people’s mass uprising against the State in spring last year. The Tibetans, in one voice in all the Tibetan areas in present day China, showed their discontentment and rejection of the Chinese rule which has been marked by gross violations of human rights,” the centre said in a press release Friday.

“China should not be re-elected to the Human Rights Council unless and until it can demonstrate not only by policy formulation but in practice its commitment to the protection of human rights of the Tibetan people.”

China’s current membership expires on June 19, 2009 and its second term in the Council, say analysts, will raise questions on its eligibility as a member. “This move will also develop a concern towards the credibility of the Council itself which is established on the premise that ‘members elected to the Council shall uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights.”

Tibetan rights groups say that the protests throughout Tibet against the government was a clear indication that the Tibetan people did not want Chinese rule in the region which is marked by flagrant human rights violation.

China as the most populated nation and one of the key players in the international system needs to exhibit evidences of moral uprightness and tolerance in order to be considered eligible for re election to the council.

The UN Human Rights Council was formerly the ‘UN Commission on Human Rights’ which was dissolved in June 2006 to better address the human rights issues in the world and to do away with the inadequacies of the previous body.

 

Dalai Lama sees long-term hope for Tibet
AFP[Monday, May 11, 2009 12:56]
WASHINGTON, May 10 – The Dalai Lama said Chinese rule was a “death sentence” for Tibetan heritage but stressed the future looked brighter for his people as China itself modernizes.

In a CNN interview broadcast Sunday, the 73-year-old spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhists also said his reincarnation would be found in the “free world” rather than in Chinese-occupied Tibet.

Chinese hardliners were guilty of “cultural genocide” in their assault on Tibet’s way of life, he said.

Speaking in English, he said the vast majority of Tibetans were “very unhappy” as they saw their “cultural heritage passing through something like a death sentence.”

Viewed locally, the Dalai Lama said, Tibet’s prospects appear “hopeless” as communist rulers look to flood his homeland with ethnic-Chinese settlers and dilute its Buddhist culture.

The Dalai Lama, seen here in 2008, said Chinese rule was a “death sentence” for Tibetan heritage but stressed the future looked brighter for his people as China itself modernizes. (AFP/JIJI Press/File)

“If we look at Tibetan issue from wider perspective, I feel much hope because China is changing,” he said, also noting strong public support for Tibet in Europe and North America.

“And then on the other hand, the Tibetan spirit inside Tibet is wonderful.”

The Dalai Lama has frequently said he wants to retire but has kept up a frenetic travel schedule. The Nobel Peace laureate is currently touring the United States, but he does not plan to visit Washington.

He is expected to return to the United States in October, when he hopes to meet with President Barack Obama.

China should see the Dalai Lama as “part of the solution” on Tibet instead of trying to isolate him, Obama’s top Asia adviser Jeff Bader said on May 1.

But Beijing brands the Dalai Lama a separatist and has stepped up pressure on world leaders, including Obama, not to meet with him. The Buddhist leader fled to India 50 years ago as China crushed an abortive uprising in Tibet.

The Dalai Lama, an advocate of non-violence, says he is only seeking greater rights for Tibetans under Chinese rule.

However, he told CNN that his vision of a Tibetan homeland took in parts of five Chinese provinces lying beyond what Beijing styles as the Tibet Autonomous Region.

“All in part they are Tibetan there,” he said. “My definition of Tibet are those people who speak Tibetan, who practice Tibetan culture.”

The Dalai Lama rejected China’s insistence that it will select the boy reincarnation who will become Tibet’s next Buddhist leader.

The next Dalai Lama would have to continue his unfinished work, “so logically in case I die outside (Tibet),” the new leader would have to be found “in outside free world.”

 

Court sentences 3 youths to jail terms
Phayul[Sunday, May 10, 2009 20:50]
by Kalsang Rinchen

Dharamsala, May 10 – A court in Zoege County has passed jail sentences on two Tibetan brothers and another youth on Thursday (May 7, 2009) according to the Voice of Tibet radio service.

Jampel, aged 29, and Lama, aged 23, of Chashang Taringtsang family of Ngaba County have been sentenced to four years in prison while Namkho, aged 27, of Chashang Kyajigtsang family has been sentenced to three years in jail.

However, exact information about the charges put against the three Tibetan youths is unavailable, according to Tsering, a monk of Kirti monastery who told the radio yesterday that the three are currently held at Zoege County.

Tsering said that the Tibetans who are being tried at various courts in the region are not being provided legal representation by lawyers of their choice, and that the sentencing is as arbitrary as the charges leveled against them.

Ngaba County last year saw one of the bloodiest crackdowns by Chinese security forces after protests in the Tibetan capital Lhasa spread across the restive Himalayan region.

 
 
May 10th, 2009

Protest Monks Escape Tibet
RFA[Saturday, May 09, 2009 23:24]
Five Tibetan monks wanted in China for staging a protest at a major monastery reach safety in India.

NEW DELHI — Five Tibetan monks who took part in widely publicized 2008 protests against Chinese rule have arrived safely in the Indian capital after eluding Chinese security forces for more than a year.

The monks—identified as Gendun Gyatso, Kelsang Jinpa, Lobsang Gyatso, Jamyang Jinpa, and Jigme Gyatso—had disrupted a government-controlled tour by foreign journalists of Labrang monastery, in a Tibetan-populated area of China’s Gansu province, in April last year.

Their demonstration, in which they called for freedom for Tibet, came amid widespread protests against Chinese rule throughout the Tibetan region beginning in March.

Hearing after the protest that they had been targeted for arrest, the five escaped in separate groups into the hills near the monastery.

“We lived like animals, moving from place to place. But this was better than prison,” Gendun Gyatso, one of the protest organizers, said in an interview.

After two months in hiding, Gyatso said, he and two friends found themselves surrounded one day by Chinese police. Gyatso and Kelsang Jinpa again escaped.

Their companion was captured and remains in jail, Gyatso said.

Advised to escape

Jamyang Jinpa, one of the monks who spoke to foreign journalists during the April protest, said that he first heard on a Radio Free Asia Amdo-dialect broadcast that the reporters had been invited to visit Labrang.

“But we didn’t know the exact date,” he said.

Jinpa said that he and monastery classmates Lobsang Gyatso and Jigme Gyatso then helped to plan the protest, feeling this would be a “good opportunity” to publicize concerns about Tibet.

“We called for freedom for Tibet and for the release of Tibetan political prisoners, including the Panchen Lama,” Jinpa said.

Chinese troops surrounded Labrang monastery after the protest, Jinpa said, adding that he and his friends then fled into the hills dressed as laymen after a lama advised them to escape.

Asked about the group’s present plans, Jinpa said that they now want only to go to Dharamsala, seat of the Tibetan government-in-exile, to meet the Dalai Lama, Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader.

Despite their escape, they have no special feeling of accomplishment, he said.

“Too many people are still suffering in Tibet,” he said.

Massive protests

Much of Tibet has been closed to foreigners since a peaceful demonstration last year in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, erupted into a riot that left at least 22 dead, ignited protests in three neighboring provinces, and prompted Beijing to dramatically increase its troop presence.

The Tibetan government-in-exile in India says about 220 Tibetans died and nearly 7,000 were detained in the subsequent region-wide crackdown.

Original reporting by Palden Gyal for RFA’s Tibetan service. Tibetan service director: Jigme Ngapo. Translations by Karma Dorjee. Written in English by Richard Finney. Edited and produced for the Web by Sarah Jackson-Han.

 

Dalai Lama to teach Tibetan youth in June
Phayul[Friday, May 08, 2009 15:37]
By Phurbu Thinley
Dharamsala, May 8: His Holiness the Dalai Lama will give a two-day special introductory Buddhist teaching for young Tibetans here next month.

This would be His Holiness’ third such teachings since it was first initiated in 2007 by Buddhism Introductory Committee of Dharamsala (BICD). The organizers told Phayul that the teachings would be held at UTCV School on June 24 and 25.

“The teachings are primarily aimed at motivating young Tibetans in exile into learning Buddhism at academic level and to instill a deeper understanding of Tibetan Buddhist culture and its core spiritual values,” Dawa Tsering, who heads the Committee, said.

“Although this special introductory Buddhist classes are meant for young Tibetans, we have not, however, fixed any age limits for the applicants. The main requirement to attend the teachings is that one must get registered with us with a brief bio-data before the end of this month,” said Dawa, who is also a member of the Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile.

His Holiness the Dalai Lama responds to a question from a Tibetan student during an introductory Buddhist teaching for Tibetan youths in the main auditorium of Upper Tibetan Children’s Village (UTCV) School, Dharamsala, India, Thursday, June 5, 2008. (Photo: Phayul/file/Tenzin Choejor)

To make the teachings more resourceful, Dawa said there would also be time devoted for direct question and answer session with His Holiness and other distinguished Tibetan Buddhist scholars during the teachings.

In both the two previous teachings, there were more than 3000 attendees each. And they were mostly students.

“It is very encouraging to see young Tibetans showing such keen interests. Their response in the last two years has been simply overwhelming,” Dawa said.

Dawa said at least 1000 seats out of the 3000 seating capacity of the teaching venue had been reserved for Tibetans applying from outside of Dharamsala.

The BICD is a voluntary committee formed in 2006 to help Tibetan youngsters to stay accustomed with Buddha Dharma and Tibetan Buddhist culture by arranging introductory Buddhist classes. It regularly conducts Buddhist classes on Sunday

Individuals interested in attending the teachings can register their names by writing a brief bio-data to introbodism@yahoo.co.in or, can contact: 9418185475 (Mob) or 1892-221028/220776 for further information.

The last date for registration is Friday, May 30, 2009.

 

World must pressure China over Tiananmen: dissidents
AFP[Friday, May 08, 2009 17:49]
BEIJING — Dissident victims of China’s crackdown on the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests have called for world pressure on Beijing to reverse the official verdict on the incident as its 20th anniversary is approaching.

Failure to stand up to a rising China over the “atrocity” of June 4, 1989, tacitly abets Communist Party repression, they said.

“So far, the international community… has adopted a policy of appeasement towards the Chinese government,” said Ding Zilin, whose teenage son Jiang Jielian was shot dead by the army.

“They are lenient towards this atrocity,” said Ding, 72, a former philosophy professor and now leader of the Tiananmen Mothers, which for 20 years has unsuccessfully pressured the government to be heard.

Early on June 4, Chinese tanks and soldiers rolled into Tiananmen Square, killing hundreds, and possibly thousands, as the government moved to crush weeks-long pro-democracy demonstrations that had hugely embarrassed the ruling Communist Party.

China’s government has refused to provide a full account of the bloodshed, which remains a taboo subject in China and is only referred to officially as a “political disturbance”, if mentioned at all.

A young man adresses the crowd gathered at Tiananmen Square in Beijing, in May 1989
But foreign pressure for a reassessment of the incident and rehabilitation of its victims, living or dead, is vital on the 20th anniversary if China is to have any hope of healing “the wrongs of the past,” dissident Bao Tong said.

“A government that is not responsible to its own people cannot be responsible toward the rest of the world,” he said.

Bao, 76, a former top aide to late Chinese leader Zhao Ziyang, was arrested after Zhao himself was purged for sympathising with the protesters. He has spent most of the last 20 years in jail, under house arrest or facing other restrictions.

“Not wanting to offend China means they cannot help China, cannot help China’s people attain their own rights, and cannot help the world community gain a reliable, stable, peaceful member,” he said.

Protesters check a burning armoured personnel carrier near Tiananmen Square, in June 1989

“This is not a good thing. If (the world) does not care, then they bear a large part of the responsibility.”

In common with previous years, China is widely expected to tighten security as the anniversary nears, to thwart any calls for a reassessment.

Dissidents have already reported being detained and harassed on the April 15 anniversary of the death of reformist communist leader Hu Yaobang. It was Hu’s death that sparked the calls for political reform that led to the Tiananmen demonstrations.

But Qi Zhiyong, who lost a leg after being shot on June 4, echoed other dissidents in saying the Communist Party would never come clean on its “crimes” at Tiananmen.

Qi, 52, calls the party a “Chinese dynasty” committed solely to its own survival, through violence if necessary.

“As long as the party does not reassess their judgement on June 4 and acknowledge that it was a patriotic and democratic movement, then democracy cannot advance here.

“It means that all they say about advancing democracy and human rights are lies,” he said.

 

Report: 5,335 students dead/missing in China quake
AP[Friday, May 08, 2009 17:40]
By AUDRA ANG
BEIJING — China on Thursday released its first official tally of students who died or went missing in last year’s Sichuan earthquake — 5,335 — but denied allegations of corruption and shoddy construction — a politically charged issue that has been an enduring source of grief to parents.

Tu Wentao, head of the Sichuan’s provincial education department, said 5,335 schoolchildren died or went missing in the massive May 12 quake, and another 546 have been certified as disabled from injuries they sustained.

“The numbers have gone through several checks by our department,” said Tu, whose remarks at a press conference in Sichuan’s capital, Chengdu, were carried on a provincial government news Web site.

No reason was given for the release of the figures on Thursday — days before the one-year anniversary of the disaster, which left nearly 90,000 people dead or missing and another 5 million homeless. But some say it could be a sign that the government is attempting to stem ongoing discontent.

Authorities began a count of victims within hours after the magnitude-7.9 temblor razed a major section of the mountainous province. But they have refused until now to say how many students were killed, many of them crushed when thousands of classrooms collapsed while other buildings around them remained intact.

Officials have said that compiling and confirming the names of the students was a complicated process, and blame the sheer force of the quake as the main cause of the number of flattened schools.

In this photo taken on April 13, 2009, Xu Changyun holds a picture of his son Xu Mengtao,who was 15 when he was killed after his middle school collapsed in the May 12, 2008 earthquake, at her home Qushan town, Beichuan county, China.The death of so many children has touched a nerve nationwide, raising questions about official corruption, mismanagement, government responsibility _ the underside of fast-paced economic growth. The political sensitivity of the issue has spawned many instances of government attempts to intimidate the parents and activists fighting to get the truth out. (AP Photo/ Elizabeth Dalziel)

“According to our investigations and samples we have taken, we have not found any case of buildings that collapsed in the earthquake zone mainly because of construction quality,” Yang Hongbo, head of Sichuan’s construction department, said at the news conference.

He said “once there is concrete evidence to prove that problems exist in building designs and construction, relevant departments will investigate according to law.”

But parents insist the schools crumbled so easily because corruption and mismanagement led to slipshod construction methods and weak buildings that were not up to code. Some say materials meant for school construction projects were sold on the side by contractors for personal gain.

So far no one has been held responsible or punished.

The childrens’ deaths have sparked national outrage and have fueled unrest among parents. Many have petitioned and protested, only to be detained or warned against speaking out. Activists sympathetic to their cause have been harassed or taken away by police.

Si-si Liu, a Hong Kong researcher with Amnesty International, said the rights group welcomed the release of the new figures, but added that fundamental questions such as why so many schools collapsed have not been answered.

“We hope that the government will make public, explain to the public what efforts they have made and what’s the progress of the investigation,” Liu said. “They need to be a government that is accountable to its people. Authorities have to make these efforts transparent.”

The London-based group released a report last week chronicling instances in which dozens of parents were questioned or detained by police while seeking answers from courts and local officials.

Grieving parents took little solace and were skeptical of the toll.

“Announcing the numbers won’t bring us any consolation,” said Liu Xiaobin, whose 11-year-old son was killed when the three-story Fuxin No. 2 Primary School sank into the ground and the rest of the neighborhood remained standing.

“We want the government to investigate the situation at the schools … or we will petition again because that is our legal right,” said Liu, who traveled to Beijing last week to take his case to the central government — only to be sent home by local officials.

Ai Weiwei, an avant garde artist and high-profile critic of Beijing’s policies, said Thursday’s disclosure was an empty gesture.

“There’s no significance to this announcement because it didn’t give any names or any other information on where they died, which schools or which classes they were in,” Ai said in a telephone interview. “This is nonsense.”

In his blog, Ai has confirmed almost 5,000 student names and estimates that the toll could reach 8,000. At least 20 of his helpers have been detained by local authorities, he said.

Tan Zuoren, another activist who conducted his own investigation into 64 schools in the quake zone, estimated that more than 5,600 students died or were missing. Tan, who has since been detained on suspicion of subversion, said that number was incomplete.

In Beichuan, a valley town so shattered it is being rebuilt in a new location, Liang Sifa insists “the government’s number is definitely smaller than the actual figure.”

“In Beichuan Middle School alone, the estimated student deaths are about 2,000,” said Liang, whose 18-year-old son was killed in a school collapse. “I feel uneasy because the government is still lying.”

 

 

The Dalai Lama’s two-decade-old strategy has gone flat. Is it time for a ‘Baltic solution’?
Himal South Asia[Friday, May 08, 2009 01:34]
By Tenzing Sonam

The year 2008, for many reasons, is likely to go down in the annals of recent Tibetan history as a watershed year. This was the year when Tibetans in Tibet, 49 years after the takeover of their country, demonstrated clearly and loudly that they were still unhappy under Chinese rule; when a new generation of Tibetans in Tibet, spanning the entire society from monks and nomads to farmers and students, became politicised; and when the Tibetan movement assumed a pan-national character, involving people from all three traditional provinces of Tibet in a united and hitherto unprecedented manner. Finally, this was also the year when the Dalai Lama’s Middle Way approach, which gives up the demand for independence in return for genuine autonomy, and which he has pursued patiently and unwaveringly since the late 1980s, finally crashed in the face of Beijing’s unequivocal rejection. Now, a year on from the widespread anti-Chinese demonstrations of spring 2008, and six months since the ‘special meeting’ convened by the Dalai Lama to discuss future options for the Tibet movement, it is time to face up to some harsh realities.

After years of leading Dharamsala up the garden path of promised negotiations, Beijing unceremoniously and unambiguously pulled the rug out from under the Dalai Lama’s envoys in November 2008, when it categorically rejected his Middle Way approach and the formal proposal that emerged from it, the Memorandum on Genuine Autonomy for the Tibetan People. Not only this, Chinese officials even dismissed the right of the Dalai Lama to represent the Tibetan people. In a news conference in Beijing on 12 November, Zhu Weiqun, the Executive Vice-Minister of the United Front Work Department, accused the Memorandum of seeking “half-independence” and “covert independence”. Furthermore, he stated: “We talked with Mr Lodi Gyari” – the Dalai Lama’s special envoy – “and his party only because they were the Dalai Lama’s private representatives. And we merely talked about how the Dalai Lama should completely give up his splitting opinions and actions, and strive for the understanding of the central authorities and all Chinese people so as to solve the issue concerning his own prospect. We never discussed the so-called ‘Tibet issue’.”

It was a major turnaround. Whatever the nature of their discussions in private – and observers have always been led by the Dalai Lama’s envoys to believe that these were substantial and building up to real negotiations – the Chinese clearly had no qualms about publicly quashing the entire exercise in one humiliating move. Those who had always warned that Beijing was not serious about the talks, and was simply playing for time, were vindicated. But even to the most ardent critics of the Middle Way approach, China’s decision to abandon any pretence of discussion with the Dalai Lama so soon after the Beijing Olympics, held just three months before, undoubtedly came as a surprise.

It is clear that China is now ready to embark on a new strategy in its efforts to resolve the Tibet question – one that has no place for the Dalai Lama. In the short term, this seems to mean continuing its campaign to discredit and sideline the Dalai Lama internationally, while using brute force and draconian measures to stamp out any sign of protest or dissent on the plateau. China is engaging in this with impunity, simply because there is no one to tell it not to do so. The international economic crisis has made China an even stronger world player, one that is able to dictate terms to the West in a way that would have been unthinkable even a year ago. Beijing is in no mood to listen to Western admonitions about its human-rights record or conduct, and Western governments are in no position to push the point.

Of course, Chinese officials do understand that there is deep discontent in Tibet. But they believe that this will disappear in the longer term, particularly once the Dalai Lama is no longer there to provide inspiration. And the government is clearly prepared to wait for this to happen. More interestingly, Beijing also seems to have decided to confront the Dalai Lama’s influence on the world stage, by challenging the exile Tibetan perspective in the public debate over Tibet – or, at least, influencing it so that it is no longer a black-and-white issue. It is doing this by aggressively asserting its own view of Tibet to the world.

A case in point is the eight-page advertisement supplement headlined “China’s Tibet: The Past and the Present”, which came out in the Hindustan Times edition of 9 April 2009. Abundantly illustrated with photographs and statistics, it purports to show how backward and hellish old Tibet was, and how much progress and development, both socially and economically, the Chinese government’s munificence has brought to the area. It makes no mention of the Dalai Lama – China wants to marginalise him – or the recent unrest in Tibet, which it chooses to portray as the work of a few agents provocateurs. Instead, it stresses its claim that China’s rule in Tibet has brought modernisation, prosperity and happiness to the long-suffering, and now eternally grateful, people of Tibet. For the uninformed reader, the facts are impressive and convincing.

Similarly, China’s declaration that, beginning this year, 28 March would be celebrated as Serf Emancipation Day in Tibet, is a direct challenge to the 10 March Uprising Day commemorated by Tibetans in exile, an anniversary that has continued to challenge the legitimacy of China’s rule over Tibet. This may seem provocative and crude to those who know something about the real situation in Tibet; but China is not concerned about such individuals. Rather, its officials are seeking to influence the vast majority of the world’s population that knows little to nothing of Tibet. Why else would they decide to take out, on 6 April this year, an 18-page supplement entitled “50 Years of Democratic Reform in Tibet” in, of all places, the Daily Times of Malawi? Indeed, we can expect many more such supplements to appear, throughout the world, as China ratchets up its public-relations campaign on Tibet.

Dithering Dharamsala

How can the Dharamsala government-in-exile counter this new offensive? Unless it fights to reclaim its ground in this debate, and brings fresh thinking into the movement, the Tibet issue risks becoming increasingly amorphous and eventually sidelined. But Dharamsala’s response to both the situation in Tibet and the failure of its talks with China has been anything but convincing. It has simply insisted on holding on to an ever-more tenuous moral high ground, by claiming that the Middle Way approach and the Memorandum for Genuine Autonomy remain the only ways by which to resolve the Tibet issue.

The two key strategies outlined by the Kashag, the exile Tibetan cabinet, earlier this year, are to continue to promote and explain the Memorandum both among its own people and internationally, and to reach out to ordinary Chinese citizens. Its position with regard to China’s rejection of its Middle Way approach is simply to state: “The entire responsibility for the future status of our dialogues, irrespective of what it is going to be, lies squarely on the Chinese leaders. The Tibetan side has already made all the required clarifications and brought a process of dialogue that began in 2002 to its logical conclusion.” But what does this mean, exactly? That, in an ever-unpredictable, politically charged situation, Dharamsala has played its final hand and, come what may, will not budge from its position? A recent Reuters report quoted the Dalai Lama’s lead envoy, Kalsang Gyaltsen, as saying: “If there is any seriousness and political will on the part of the Chinese government, the ball is now in their court,” a sporting metaphor thereafter repeated by Prime Minister-in-exile Samdhong Rinpoche. The image here is of two equally matched contestants playing a back-and-forth game of tennis. But in reality, China has long since abandoned both the ball and the court.

Dharamsala’s curiously passive and moralistic response to the gauntlet thrown down by China is evident in a second statement by Samdhong Rinpoche, from mid-March. “If the present leadership do not wish to take the credit of resolving the Tibetan issue,” he said, “the next leadership will take the credit.” This seems to imply that Dharamsala has done the current Beijing leaders a favour by giving them the opportunity to respond positively to its proposal, and that it would be their loss if they were to refuse. But the most mystifying of the confusing signals emerging from Dharamsala is Samdhong Rinpoche’s assertion that, “As far as we are concerned, we are prepared for another hundred years of struggle. The inspiration is there. So we have no worry.”

This latter contention needs to be examined within the context of the primary justification for the Middle Way approach. The way that this strategy was originally sold to the Tibetan people was on the grounds that the situation in Tibet was so dire and so desperate that its very existence as a culture and a nation faced imminent extinction. Therefore, in order to forestall this, Tibetans had to give up the goal of independence, so that genuine negotiations over the future of Tibet could begin with China. The Dalai Lama has since repeated many times that “Tibet faces something like a death sentence”; that a “cultural genocide” is taking place there; and that if the situation does not improve soon, Tibet, as a nation, would soon disappear. Samdhong Rinpoche himself, in an interview last March, said, “If the Tibet issue is not resolved amicably within five, ten years of time, there will be no more Tibet inside Tibet. It will be a completely non-Tibetans’ land. It may be Han Chinese or it may be some other minority but Tibetans will be completely lost in the vast majority of non-Tibetans. It is very true and we also realize that it is a very urgent threat for the survival of Tibet, but what we can do?”

The crux of the Middle Way approach was that it provided a compromise position that would, ostensibly, be acceptable to China and, therefore, would stand a better chance of being able to save Tibet’s culture and identity. In a meeting with Chinese journalists in Seattle in April 2008, the Dalai Lama clearly spelled out his reasoning behind this approach: “We are not seeking independence. We are very much happy to remain within the People’s Republic of China. We are concerned about the preservation of Tibetan culture, Tibetan Buddhism, environment.” But if this is not the case, as Samdhong Rinpoche now seems to be implying, and if the struggle can continue for another hundred years without any worry, then the question inevitably arises: Why should Tibetans spend the next hundred years struggling for genuine autonomy when they could just as easily be fighting for the very goal that all Tibetans believe in – independence?

Dharamsala’s justification for continuing with the Middle Way approach is that it is a democratically endorsed policy, and one that received renewed support from the people through the outcome of the special meeting that the Dalai Lama convened in November. Unsurprisingly, delegates at that meeting, representing a cross-section of the exile Tibetan community, reiterated their faith in the Dalai Lama’s leadership, and a majority endorsed his Middle Way approach. But anyone familiar with the workings of Tibetan society knows that such an endorsement is not so much for the Middle Way approach as it is for the Dalai Lama himself. If, tomorrow, the Dalai Lama were suddenly to decide that the Middle Way approach is no longer a viable option and that he would instead revert to the goal of independence, would even one Tibetan be prepared to stand up to him because of his or her belief in the principle of the Middle Way approach? The spiritual devotion to the Dalai Lama simply clouds any kind of political realism among his people.

In fact, a more significant result of the special meeting was the recommendation that support for the Middle Way approach should be made conditional on concrete results emerging within a short timeframe. Failing that, all other options, including independence, were to be discussed. Strangely, this point has neither been taken up by the government-in-exile, nor even mentioned in its subsequent statements, which only stress overwhelming support for the Middle Way approach. Why this reticence to open up the debate on the future course of action for Tibet when, patently, the current policy has run its course? What is to be gained from holding on to the Middle Way approach in this context, other than in trying to prove a moral point?

The Middle Way approach is, after all, a political strategy, and one that has not paid tangible dividends. Why, then, is it being promoted with the dogmatic zeal of a religious doctrine, unchallengeable and unshakable? In fact, the Kashag’s insistence on holding on to the Middle Way approach as a ‘democratically endorsed’ decision is both disingenuous and, in the long run, dangerous. There is absolutely no guarantee that, in the Dalai Lama’s absence, there would be continuing support for the Middle Way approach and genuine autonomy.

Baltic archetype

Meanwhile, in Tibet itself the situation could not be worse. A year on from the massive protests of March-April 2008, it would appear that the spring uprising, which inspired Tibetans everywhere so powerfully and seemed to have held out so much promise, has ended in tragedy. The sacrifice of the thousands who risked their lives has today achieved nothing more than a brief, incandescent moment in the international spotlight.

In fact, however, all is not as it seems. The long-term consequences of the demonstrations may yet prove to be more significant than anyone can currently imagine, and might come back to haunt the Chinese leadership. One hint of this came during a radio call-in show on Radio Free Asia’s Tibetan language service in Washington, DC, last September. The reporter, Dolkar, was in conversation with three young Tibetan students studying in Beijing. One told her:

The uprisings of ‘89 and ‘59 were a long time ago, and for us youngsters, these are just like stories from the past. But now, with the recent uprisings and the oppression, the story has unfolded for real in front of our own eyes. This was a reminder of our past; it woke us up. Until recently, people have been disheartened and scared to carry out any action. But with the March demonstrations, and with the coming-together of people from all walks of life, we have been reminded that the burden of the struggle for truth and freedom does not rely only on one or two persons. It isn’t just the responsibility of His Holiness or the Tibetans in exile, nor is it just the responsibility of the educated ones, but it is the responsibility of every one of us. This has become very clear this time.

This may be the real impact of the protests, and the reason why they may not ultimately have been in vain. A new generation of Tibetan activists has been born in Tibet, and it has now been empowered to carry the struggle into the future. The renewed belief and commitment of this new generation in Tibet demand that the policies made by the government-in-exile are strong and inspirational, and are designed to keep the movement alive for as long as it takes to achieve its goals. But it seems increasingly unlikely that doggedly hanging on to the Middle Way approach is the way to meet this challenge.

Given Beijing’s aggressive new strategy to neutralise the Tibet issue internationally, the only practical and effective course of action open to Dharamsala would seem to be what one long-time Tibet watcher calls the ‘Baltic solution’. This would entail shifting the goal of the struggle back to independence. It would require persevering in the international forum by repeatedly and forcefully asserting Tibet’s claim to independence, both historically and in accordance with the principles of self-determination; knowing full well that, in the short term, this would not pay concrete dividends other than keeping the idea of Tibetan nationhood alive. At the same time, it would mean building up a strong and genuinely democratic government-in-exile, which would prepare Tibetans for a post-Dalai Lama future and shift the focus of the struggle away from his person, thereby keeping it from disintegrating in his absence.

These measures would invigorate the Tibet movement, make it vibrant and unified, and help it to remain a source of hope and inspiration for the people inside Tibet. And in some distant future, when the Communist Party of China no longer holds power, these measures would also do much to prepare the ground for real negotiations, and for the possibility of either complete independence or genuine autonomy in its true sense. It took the Baltic states more than 70 years to regain their independence; today, Tibet has as much right and resilience as a nation to hope for the same. If Samdhong Rinpoche is serious about keeping the Tibetan struggle alive for a hundred years, this may be the only option he has.

The writer is a pioneer of diaspora Tibetan filmmaking world. He runs a production company called White Crane Films with his wife Ritu Sarin. The couple has made many successful films including a narrative feature called Dreaming Lhasa. Their latest film Dalai Lama: 50 years after the fall of Tibet was recently premiered on some major European channels.

The views expressed in this piece are that of the author and the publication of the piece on this website does not necessarily reflect their endorsement by the website.

 

China warns France not to make “further errors” on Tibet
Phayul[Thursday, May 07, 2009 21:46]
By Phurbu Thinley
Dharamsala, May 7: China on Thursday warned Paris not to make more “errors” on Tibet by honouring the Dalai Lama with its honorary citizenship when he visits the city next month.

“If the Paris city government does make this award, it will definitely meet once again with the Chinese people’s firm opposition,” AFP reported foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu as saying during a regular news briefing in Beijing.

“We urge the Paris side to stop doing things that interfere in China’s internal affairs and make no further errors on the Tibet-related issue.”

“With the concerted efforts of people from both countries, bilateral relations have finally returned to a sound and stable development track,” Ma said.

France’s President Nicolas Sarkozy (C) and Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama meet in Gdansk December 6, 2008. (REUTERS/Eric Feferberg/Pool/Files)
The Dalai Lama may receive the title of honorary citizen of Paris from the mayor Bertrand Delanoe when His Holiness visits France from June 6 to 8.

This is not the first time China has asked France not to grant the exiled Tibetan leader honorary citizenship of Paris.

When Paris city council, led by socialist Delanoe, approved a resolution in April 2008 to honour the Dalai Lama, it reportedly provoked a sharp response from China at the time. Earlier on Tuesday, Chinese state media carried a report cautioning France that such move would affect the Sino-French ties.

Sino-France relations soured considerably after French President Nicolas Sarkozy defied stern warning from Beijing and met with the exiled Tibetan leader in Poland in December 2008.

“A year ago, the city of Paris made a decision to make the Dalai Lama a so-called honorary citizen, which made the Chinese people very angry,” Reuters quoted Ma as saying at the news briefing.

“If the city of Paris makes him a so-called honorary citizen, it will certainly once again be opposed by the Chinese people. We demand the Paris city government stop all actions which interfere in China’s internal affairs and not make the same mistakes again and again on the Tibet issue.”

According to Reuters, the Chinese foreign ministry spokesman separately rebuffed an attempt by a Spanish judge to be allowed to interrogate eight senior Chinese officials about unrest in Tibet last year.

A Madrid judge asked on Tuesday to be allowed to question eight Chinese officials, including China’s defence minister, as part of a probe into the deaths of at least 203 Tibetans and the disappearance or arrest of another 5,972 during anti-China unrest in 2008.

A Human Rights activist hold flares in front of a Tibetan flag as he demontrates near the Effeil tower in Paris in early August 2008. China has warned Paris not to make more “errors” on Tibet amid news the Dalai Lama may be made an honorary citizen of the French capital, just as frosty ties between the two nations had improved. (AFP/File/Patrick Kovarik)