B.RAMAN
“Here is a community, which is trying very hard to
preserve its culture, its traditions, and its language in the hope that one day
when it gets free from the most tyrannous regime of the world, it will take it
all back to its homeland where it all belongs. This community has immense faith
in its leader His Holiness, the Dalai Lama, that he will bring them home one
day, who sometimes himself faces moral conflicts as a political and a spiritual
leader but still manages to bind them so well. They know that they are just 6
million in front of China’s population of 1.3 billion, but they hold on to hope
and faith that someday they will go back and will live freely, will breathe
freely, will smile freely. Till then they are in the country of their refuge,
carving an identity for themselves, fighting each day to mingle with the people
here who sometimes don’t welcome them , doing their best to evolve their
community as a whole in the land of their exile where they came with nothing;
but at the same time working towards their freedom, slowly and steadily.”
----- From the Web Site of Students For A Free Tibet
The global attention today is not on the Tibetan
areas of China or on Xinjiang, the
homeland of the Uighurs. It is on Beijing.
2. The world needs Chinese co-operation for dealing
with the current global economic decline. It needs Chinese co-operation for
ensuring peace in the Pacific and the South China Sea.
3. The global attention is presently more on
Beijing than on the Tibetan areas and Xinjiang because a new Party and Government
leadership is to take over in China in
the coming months. At the 18th Congress of the Communist Party of
China (CPC) expected in October, a new party leadership headed by Xi
Jinping is to take over from the present
team headed by Hu Jintao. At the session
of the National People’s Congress scheduled to be held next March, a new
Government headed by Xi as the President in place of Hu and Li Keqiang as the new Prime Minister in place
of Wen Jiabao is expected to take over.
4. China analysts will know that changes in party
and Government leadership in China do not necessarily lead to major policy
changes---domestic and foreign. There may be changes in style due to new
incumbents coming to office and new nuances depending on the inner-party and
inner-Government equations. If at all there are any changes, it will be
changement dans la continuite--- change in continuity.
5. And the world is curious to find out what shape
Chinese policies could take under the new leadership. What impact that will
have on the Chinese and global economy and on regional peace and harmony?
6.As a result of the increasing global focus on the
coming Party and Government changes in Beijing, there is diminishing attention to
the Tibetan issue. Continuing violations of the human rights of the
Tibetans and the stepped-up Chinese
efforts to impart legitimacy to the
so-called Panchen Lama selected by the party in place of the Panchen Lama
chosen by the Tibetans under the guidance of His Holiness the Dalai Lama who
has been in jail for many years now, are no longer receiving the global
attention they deserve.
7.His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan
Government-in-exile headed by Harvard-educated Prime Minister Lobsang Sangay,
who completed one year in office on August 8,2012, realise that there will be
no forward movement on the Tibetan issue till the new party and Government
leadership assumes office in Beijing and comes to grips with issues of
governance. That is why talks between the CPC and the representatives of His
Holiness, which were going on intermittently, are in a state of suspension. The
special negotiators of His Holiness have resigned due to their disenchantment
with the continued rigidity in the CPC’s policy on Tibet and their successors
have not yet been named by the Government-in-exile.
8.The policies of the CPC and the Chinese Government
are based on the following conditions:
·
Any talks will be on the future of His
Holiness and not on the future of the Tibetans which has already been decided.
His Holiness has no locus standi to talk on the future of the Tibetans.
·
There is no question of granting
autonomy to the Tibetan areas of China and re-merging them into one entity as
they were before the Chinese occupied Tibet.
·
The legitimacy of the Panchen Lama
designated by the CPC has to be accepted.
·
The religious process for the selection
of the next Dalai Lama after the death of His Holiness will be co-ordinated by
the CPC-designated Panchen Lama under the guidance of the CPC. The next Dalai
Lama has to have the approval of the CPC.
9. These conditions cannot be acceptable to any self-respecting
Tibetan. His Holiness has toned down his original demand by agreeing to accept
autonomy for Tibet without insisting on independence. The Chinese are not
prepared to make any concessions and are waiting for the day when His Holiness
will be no more and they can proclaim the installation of the CPC-designated
Dalai Lama and the end of the Tibetan problem
10. But, the problem is showing no signs of ending
and it is unlike to end even if the Chinese succeed in their machinations.
Despite undoubted economic progress in Tibet, the Tibetans’ devotion to His
Holiness and their attachment to their culture, religion and self-respect
remain as strong as ever. It is so among the Tibetans living in exile as well
as among those living in China under severe Chinese repression. It is so among
the older generation of Tibetans as among the GenNext.
11. The new generation of Tibetans growing to adulthood in exile as well as in the
Tibetan areas of China, many of whom in China have never even met His Holiness,
is determined to see that the Tibetan cause will not perish and that the
Tibetans will once again be masters of their culture, religion and destiny.
There is a rare unity among the Tibetan monks and the lay people in keeping the
cause alive.
12. This is not an externally-motivated and
orchestrated movement. It is a spontaneous, self-motivated and self-generated
movement. The continuing reports of self-immolation by monks and lay
people---many of them from the new generation--- speak of the high level of
self-motivation of young individuals. There have been 46 instances of
self-immolation since March last year---most of them from Sichuan where the
Kirti monastery, the epi-centre of the neo-Tibetan resistance movement
started--- and some from the Gansu province and the so-called Tibet Autonomous
Region. The latest to self-immolate on August 7 was a 26-year-old Tibetan
mother of two children in the Gansu province. These are the young heroes of the
neo-Tibetan resistance movement who have been bravely keeping the movement
alive by sacrificing their lives.
13.For the Tibetan cause to prevail, it is
important for it to have global support---moral and material. In a world
increasingly dependent on China for economic prosperity and peace and harmony,
this global support has been increasingly tentative and hesitant. The older
generation, which used to support His Holiness and the Tibetan cause, remains
steadfast in its support.
14. The older generation of supporters like me and
countless others in India and other countries will soon be passing away. The
new generation has to come forward to express its solidarity with the GenNext
of Tibetans and encourage them in their attempts to keep their cause alive. In
the Western countries, particularly in the US, many young people have been
expressing their moral support to the Tibetan cause. But, unfortunately in
India, the younger generation is showing dwindling interest in the Tibetan
cause. This has to be reversed. (10-8-12)
( The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director,
Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate, Chennai Centre For China
Studies. E-Mail: seventyone2@gmail.com . Twitter: @SORBONNE75 )
1 comment:
the Tibetan cause will remain low profile in global terms until India goes on the record to denounce the Chinese occupation of Tibet. We must make Tibet China's Pakistan.
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