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Updated Thursday, March 11, 2010 10:09 am TWN, By Abhishek Madhukar, Reuters The Dalai Lama backs Xinjiang UighursIn an address marking 51 years since he fled Tibet after a failed uprising against Chinese rule, the Dalai Lama referred to Xinjiang as “East Turkestan”, the name given to it by pro-independence exiles. The region is populated by an ethnic minority Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking largely Muslim people. “Let us also remember the people of East Turkestan who have experienced great difficulties and increased oppression,” he told about 3,000 Tibetans in Dharamsala, the northern Indian hill town where he has lived for five decades. “I would like to express my solidarity and stand firmly with them”. Chinese authorities in Xinjiang have waged a heavy-handed campaign against what China calls violent separatist activity by Uighurs. Ethnic violence there last year between Uighurs and majority Han Chinese led to at least 200 deaths. The Dalai Lama's comments will almost certainly rile Beijing, which reviles the Nobel Peace Prize winner as a separatist and says he foments violence. The Dalai Lama denies both charges, saying he merely seeks genuine autonomy for the remote region. In Dharamsala, thousands of exiled Tibetans, including maroon-robed monks, nuns and many Westerners, marked the day with a march carrying blue-yellow-red Tibetan flags and banners with anti-China messages. In neighbouring Nepal, police detained about a dozen Tibetan protestors when they tried to storm a Chinese consulate office in the capital Kathmandu. The protestors, who shouted “Free Tibet”, were dragged away by riot police to waiting vans. In a separate incident, dozens of Tibetan refugees protested against China after prayer meetings inside a Buddhist monastery. APPEAL TO OFFICIALS Reaching out to Tibetans working for the Chinese government, the Dalai Lama said: “I invite Tibetan officials serving in various Tibetan autonomous areas to visit Tibetan communities living in the free world, either officially or in a private capacity, to observe the situation for themselves.” China bans Tibetans who work for the government from visiting exile communities, but many ordinary Tibetans make the hazardous and illegal crossing to study Buddhism in Dharamsala. The Dalai Lama also vowed he and members of his self-proclaimed government-in-exile would not take any political positions if and when the Tibet issue was resolved. On Sunday, Tibet's new Chinese-appointed governor said only socialism could “save” the region and guarantee its development, and blamed the Dalai Lama for Tibet's problems. Protests led by Buddhist monks against Chinese rule in March 2008 gave way to torrid violence, with rioters torching shops and turning on residents, including Han Chinese and Hui Muslims. Tibetans see Hans as intruders threatening their culture. At least 19 people died in the 2008 unrest, which sparked waves of protest across Tibetan areas ahead of the Beijing Olympics. Pro-Tibet groups abroad say more than 200 Tibetans have died in a subsequent crackdown across the region. Beijing has denied that and said it used minimal force. The Dalai Lama said Beijing had put monks and nuns “in prison-like conditions”, making “monasteries function more like museums ... to deliberately annihilate Buddhism”. But he offered to keep talking to the Chinese, despite what he sees as “little hope” of results. China and the Dalai Lama's envoys have held several rounds of talks since 2002 but made little progress. Subscribe to The China Post and save 25%. Click here |
![]() Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama attends a ceremony to mark the 51st anniversary of the failed 1959 uprising against Chinese rule of Tibet in Dharamshala, seat of the ... Enlarge Photo
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