|
|
Updated Thursday, April 10, 2008 0:00 am TWN, By ERIC TALMADGE, AP Dalai Lama says no one can tell anti-China protesters 'to shut up'"We are not anti-Chinese. Right from the beginning, we supported the Olympic Games," he told reporters outside Tokyo on a stopover on a trip to Seattle. "I really feel very sad the government demonizes me. I am just a human, I am not a demon." Protests have been held in cities around the world in a show of sympathy for Tibet, where anti-government riots erupted last month. The Olympic torch relay has faced massive demonstrations, most recently in San Francisco. The Dalai Lama said the demonstrators had the right to their opinions, though he called for nonviolence. "The expression of their feelings is up to them," he said. "Nobody has the right to tell them to shut up. One of the problems in Tibet is that there is no freedom of speech." Chinese authorities have tightly restricted access to Tibet and Tibetan areas of western China, where protests also broke out. The sometimes violent anti-government demonstrations were the largest among Tibetans in almost two decades. "Autonomy (in Tibet) is just in name, it is not sincerely implemented. The crisis is the expression of their (Tibetans') deep regret," he said. The Chinese government responded harshly. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu repeated Chinese accusations that the Dalai Lama was "engaging in activities aimed at splitting China in the name of religion." Japan's government has been relatively quiet about the violence in Tibet and, out of deference to Beijing, does not deal officially with the Dalai Lama. Tokyo does, however, grant visas to the exiled Buddhist leader, who has visited Japan fairly frequently. Buddhism is one of Japan's main religions, along with the indigenous Shinto faith. No meetings were planned between the Dalai Lama and government officials although the wife of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe greeted him on his stopover en route from India. He is to spend two weeks in the United States. More than a dozen Buddhist monks protested Wednesday in front of visiting journalists at a monastery in western China to call for the return of the exiled Tibetan leader. The monks, whose numbers grew to about two dozen during the 10-minute incident, shouted slogans in Tibetan in an outer courtyard as journalists entered a prayer hall at the Labrang monastery in western Gansu province bordering Tibet. The incident followed a similar interruption during a closely scripted government media tour of Tibet's capital of Lhasa two weeks ago to view damage from the anti-government riots that erupted there last month. Other protests have been held in Paris, London and San Francisco along the route of the Olympic torch relay, prompting speculation that it could be shortened or possibly canceled in some areas to avoid violence. The Dalai Lama said he is not behind the unrest, and called Chinese claims that he is the mastermind "a serious allegation." "Some in the leadership consider Tibetan Buddhism is a source of separatism," he said, adding that Beijing has reacted to the protests with "violent suppression." But he added that if the situation improves, he would even be willing to attend the Olympics' opening ceremony. "If things improve and the Chinese government starts to see things realistically, I personally want to enjoy the big ceremony," he said. The Dalai Lama has been living in exile in India since 1959. Subscribe to The China Post and save 25%. Click here |
![]() Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama greets the media on his arrival at Narita International Airport, Thursday morning, April. 10, 2008. (AP) Enlarge Photo
| |||||||||||||||