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In Denmark, Dalai Lama has 'nothing to ask' politicians
by Staff Writers
Copenhagen (AFP) Feb 11, 2015


Exiled Tibet political leader to attend Europe rally in France
Paris (AFP) Feb 11, 2015 - The leader of Tibet's exiled government will travel to Paris in March to attend a European rally marking a failed 1959 uprising against China that forced the Dalai Lama to flee, a French group said Wednesday.

Lobsang Sangay, who took over as political leader of the Tibetan cause in 2011 when the Dalai Lama pared back his roles, is also due to meet parliamentarians and politicians on a visit that could irk China.

It is as yet unclear who exactly the Harvard-educated scholar will meet on his trip to Paris as Western leaders are increasingly reluctant to deal with Tibet under pressure from economic powerhouse China, which has governed the Himalayan region since 1951.

Beijing says the region has prospered under its rule, but the India-based government-in-exile accuses China of severe repression it says has sparked an unprecedented wave of self-immolations.

The rally will take place on March 14 near the Eiffel Tower, said Thupten Gyatso, who heads up a group representing the Tibetan community in France, and people from 15 European countries are due to take part in a gathering he hopes will attract thousands of supporters.

Sangay will address the crowds at a rally that also aims to "call on the international community to help us restart dialogue between Tibetans and the Chinese at a governmental level," Gyatso said.

His trip to Paris was also confirmed by Tsering Wangchuk, spokesman for the government-in-exile.

Beijing is resisting calls by Western leaders to resume talks with Tibetan officials that broke down in 2010 on providing greater autonomy for the Himalayan region and securing political and cultural freedoms.

Sangay said last year there was "total repression and total discrimination" in China's Tibetan regions, where more than 130 ethnic Tibetans have set themselves on fire since 2009 in protest at Beijing's rule, most of them dying.

"All this repression is making Tibetans more resentful of the Chinese government's policies and towards the Chinese government and various forms of protests are taking place," the Tibetan government-in-exile's prime minister said in June.

Beijing, however, has accused exiled Tibetan leaders -- and particularly the Dalai Lama -- of being engaged in "anti-China separatist activities."

The Dalai Lama said Wednesday that the Danish government's reluctance to meet him during a visit to Denmark was "logical" since his retirement meant he had "nothing to ask" politicians.

"I think it's quite logical. I have no political responsibility so even if I met some political leaders I have nothing to ask," the exiled spiritual leader -- who retired from politics in 2011 -- said at a press conference in Copenhagen.

Denmark's relationship with China was strained after former Prime Minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen held a meeting -- described as private, not official -- with the Dalai Lama in 2009.

Bilateral ministerial meetings were cancelled, and relations only warmed after Copenhagen sent a diplomatic note to Beijing saying Demark was "fully aware of the importance and sensitivity of Tibet-related issues and attatches great importance to the view of the Chinese government."

China considers Tibet an integral part of its territory, and regards the Dalai Lama as a separatist.

The Dalai Lama said the lack of a free media was a major obstacle to China becoming a democratic nation, and that censorship fomented Chinese people's "suspicion" of other countries.

"The free world has (a) responsibility to bring China into the mainstream of world democracy. Chinese people also want that," he said.

The Nobel laureate said that once the Chinese people "know the reality, they also have the ability to judge what is right or what is wrong."

"Whenever you have the opportunity, visit China and meet more people. And also if there is some kind of possibility, bring some Chinese media people, some Chinese intellectuals here," he said.

The Dalai Lama arrived in Copenhagen on Tuesday after being invited by a group of Tibetan-Buddhist organisations.

Observers say China's growing clout on the world stage has made international government leaders increasingly reluctant to meet with him.

A summit of Nobel peace laureates in Cape Town was cancelled in October after several pulled out in protest at the South African government's failure to give the Dalai Lama a visa.

In May, the Norwegian government came under fire for declining to meet with him in a controversial decision aimed at warming up icy relations with China, which froze high-level contacts with Oslo after Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010.

Last week China reiterated that is was opposed to foreign countries receiving the Dalai Lama, one day after US President Barack Obama held a symbolic first public encounter with him.


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