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China cozying up with Dalai

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Asia Sentinel


Major relief possible in religious repression

In an abrupt and unexpected reversal of policy, Chinese government officials have told monks in some Tibetan areas that they are now free to "worship" the Dalai Lama as a "religious leader." The new policy document - prefixed with the word "experiment" - also asked that the monks now refrain from "criticizing the Dalai Lama," and "stop using such labels as a wolf in a monk's robe," a common pejorative hurled against the Tibetan spiritual leader by Beijing.

"As a religious person, from now on you should respect and follow His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama," the document continued, "but in terms of politics you are not allowed to do so. Politics and religion should go separate ways."

The announcement was reportedly made during a conference held on June 14 at a so-called Qinghai Provincial Buddhist School where a new party secretary was appointed. It was attended by high-ranking ethnic Tibetan and Chinese officials, according to the Tibetan language website Khabda.org, which reported the news.

Analysts say that the Chinese government might have been forced to rethink its strategy on Tibet following more than 100 self-immolations that have occurred inside the special administrative region since 2009.

"If that document is genuine, then they are trying to diffuse the pressure of the self-immolations," said Thierry Dodin, director of the Tibet Information Service, TibetInfoNet in London.

The new policy is to be first implemented as an "experiment," according to the report. Dibyesh Anand, Tibet specialist and associate professor at Westminster University in London, sees no evidence of a major shift and says that this can be best explained as an experiment at the local level.

When the Communist Party of China (CCP) initiates a new or major policy change, they usually prefix it with the word "experimental" which means that if it works they would apply it nationwide, if it fails would be dropped from party's policy. China is slated to announce a new policy in August.

Some believe the new policy is a public relations offensive in the wake of much criticism towards the Chinese regime from the outside world especially human rights organizations in the aftermath of the series of self-immolations.

"No criticism of Dalai Lama is more to do with smarter public relations propaganda… rather than a genuine effort at reconciliation," Anand said.

However, a similar announcement was also reportedly made lifting the ban on the displaying of the Dalai Lama's pictures in homes and monasteries around the town of Dram near the Tibet-Nepal border, triggering hopes that China might be interested in easing its control on religious practice on a much wider scale.

Beijing's policy change might also be aimed to send a signal to the outside world that the new leadership is interested in changing its policy towards the Tibetan spiritual leader, said one leading Tibetan scholar. "It is an indication of change," said the scholar, who did not want to be named.

Making it even more interesting is that the news comes on the eve of China's forthcoming tour of Tibet by foreign journalists.

Recently, a few other articles have raised speculation that there might be an olive branch in the offing from Beijing authorities to the Tibetan leadership in exile.

In an interview with Hong Kong-based Asia Weekly, Jin Wei, a director of ethnic and religious affairs at the Central Party School at Beijing think tank Central Party School, also suggested that China's policy in Tibet may not be working.

She called for restarting negotiations with the Dalai Lama's representatives and has proposed that the Dalai Lama might even be invited onto Chinese soil, Hong Kong and Macau as well discussing the issue of reincarnation with the Dalai Lama himself.

Tibet watchers believe that it is best to adopt a wait-and-see approach if the China government matches their words with actions.

"If she really is transmitting a message, then we should take note of it and wait and see first because what they say does not matter, you have to see what they actually do on the ground," Dodin said.

Given China's hard-line policy, Tibetans have demonstrated a mixed response to the news, ranging from guarded optimism to outright skepticism.

Since 2009, as many as 119 Tibetans living under China's rule have set themselves on fire demanding freedom and the return of the Dalai Lama from exile. 102 of the self-immolators died in agony while the condition of more than 10 remains unknown.

(Tsering Namgyal, a journalist based in New York, is the author of a new biography of the the 17th Karmapa Ogyen Trinley Dorje published last month by Hay House, India. He is also the author of a recently published novel, The Tibetan Suitcase)
 
Personally, I think that China government is not that simple. The policy is not purely the awake of Chinese government after several of self-immolations or the new head of the government Xi Jinping has been more gentle to Tibet than the previous one. After several decades smearing the Dalai Lama, the Chinese government might realize that this way does not work. In the sense, the struggle was first the contradiction between the central government and the Dalai Lama separatist clique into an ethnic conflict between Han Chinese and Tibetans. So China unintentionally made disjunction from itself. Realizing the problem and how wrong way they have gone, the new policy can help them to go in the right direction to unification.

This new approach in Tibet is surely ease growing tension in Tibet and enhance the relations of China with other minorities. In addition, at this moment, Taiwan and Macao seems to be a bigger issue in China. Accordingly, the easier thing should be done first. By having a softer approach to Tibet, China can improve the relations of China with outside worlds and make the reunification with Taiwan more likely.

Finally, this seems to be a very good time for China to do such a thing because the Dalai Lama will die soon, the issue might turn to an end or an explosion of violence after the Dalai Lama's death depending on the attitude of Beijing. Therefore this action is a good move of China as the foundation of further movement in the future.
 
The problem with allowing the lama to come back is he wants control of territories outside Xizang, not going to happen.

HK style autonomy won't happen either.
 
Asia Sentinel is as credible as South China Morning Post, it belongs to the HK media, it has nothing to do with CPC. :coffee:
 
The problem with allowing the lama to come back is he wants control of territories outside Xizang, not going to happen.

HK style autonomy won't happen either.

I don't think he wants anything to do with Xizang , its only Tibet
 
I don't think he wants anything to do with Xizang , its only Tibet

Xizang = another name for Tibet, and during the talks with the lama he also wanted control over other area's of China with the Tibetan population and influence Sichuan and Qinghai.
 
Xizang = another name for Tibet, and during the talks with the lama he also wanted control over other area's of China with the Tibetan population and influence Sichuan and Qinghai.

I don't think so . Have met him a couple of times . Have you even seen him supporting insurgency like the one happening in Xinjiang ?? . Buddhist are pacifist and i guess they have agreed to Chinese rule over Tibet .
 
Xizang = another name for Tibet, and during the talks with the lama he also wanted control over other area's of China with the Tibetan population and influence Sichuan and Qinghai.

The 14th Dalai Lama as a senile man will perish in the next decade, thus no one in China gives a fck about this guy. :coffee:
 
I don't think so . Have met him a couple of times . Have you even seen him supporting insurgency like the one happening in Xinjiang ?? . Buddhist are pacifist and i guess they have agreed to Chinese rule over Tibet .

Xinjiang has no insurgency just occasional riots or terror attacks, If you don't remember the he ran an insurgency with the help of the CIA though the 1960's to 70's. Also the demands he made

Furthermore, the areas that are mostly ethnic Tibetan should all be put under one administrative region, the Dalai Lama says. This would include central Tibet — what China calls the Tibet Autonomous Region — and parts of the Chinese provinces of Qinghai, Sichuan, Gansu and Yunnan.

The 14th Dalai Lama as a senile man will perish in the next decade, thus no one in China gives a fck about this guy. :coffee:

If the CPC allows him to come back( which I am against) giving control of more land outside Xizang is a mistake.
 
Xinjiang has no insurgency just occasional riots or terror attacks, If you don't remember the he ran an insurgency with the help of the CIA though the 1960's to 70's. Also the demands he made





If the CPC allows him to come back( which I am against) giving control of more land outside Xizang is a mistake.



Demands != Insurgency .

Now pray tell me which Insurgency he ran with CIA??
 
Xinjiang has no insurgency just occasional riots or terror attacks, If you don't remember the he ran an insurgency with the help of the CIA though the 1960's to 70's. Also the demands he made





If the CPC allows him to come back( which I am against) giving control of more land outside Xizang is a mistake.

CPC won't give him any virtual power even in Tibet, they only want to wait until he dies in natural cause.
 
Demands != Insurgency .

Now pray tell me which Insurgency he ran with CIA??

Not necessary however I'm more skeptical of the the lama then you are.

Here from a western source.

The Dalai Lama's administration acknowledged today that it received $1.7 million a year in the 1960's from the Central Intelligence Agency, but denied reports that the Tibetan leader benefited personally from an annual subsidy of $180,000.

The money allocated for the resistance movement was spent on training volunteers and paying for guerrilla operations against the Chinese, the Tibetan government-in-exile said in a statement. It added that the subsidy earmarked for the Dalai Lama was spent on setting up offices in Geneva and New York and on international lobbying.
 
Not necessary however I'm more skeptical of the the lama then you are.

Here from a western source.

Meet Lama or his successor once and your doubts will be washed away . has there ever been armed revolution in tibet against China ??
 

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