B.RAMAN
The Tibetan independence (Rangzen) movement,
started on November 23, 2001, by Thubten Jigme Norbu, former Abbot of the
Kumbum monastery and Professor Emeritus at the Indiana University in the
US, has been slowly spreading.
2. The movement, which was launched by a group of
Tibetans who constituted themselves into what was called the Rangzen Alliance,
describes its objectives as follows: “The Rangzen Alliance is a movement of
committed Tibetans and friends, world-over, who have joined together to provide
a common platform of action for the realization of three goals:
a. The
restoration of Tibetan independence.
b. The
return of His Holiness the Dalai Lama to Tibet as the sovereign head-of-state
of an independent nation.
c. The
establishment of a fully democratic system of government in exile Tibetan
society and in free Tibet – based on the rule of law and the primacy of
individual freedom.”
3. The
Rangzen movement enjoys the support of the Tibetan Youth League (TYC) and many
members of the Tibetan diaspora spread across the world. While the movement has
reservations about the middle road policy advocated by His Holiness the Dalai
Lama envisaging autonomy for all the Tibetan areas of China in the Tibetan
Autonomous Region, Gansu, Qinghai, Sichuan and Yunnan, it has been strongly
backing the leadership of His Holiness.
4. The
movement, which had lost some momentum after the brutal suppression of the
Tibetans by the People’s Liberation Army after the anti-Chinese riots of March
2008, is again showing signs of gathering strength as resentment builds up
among the Tibetans of China and the diaspora over the Chinese indifference to
the continuing self-immolation of Tibetan monks and others in the Tibetan areas
since March 2009. 108 Tibetans have so far committed self-immolation, the
majority of them in the Sichuan province.
5.The total
Chinese indifference to the self-immolations and their attempts to arrest and
persecute relatives and friends of those committing self-immolation on charges
of complicity have added to the resentment and injected fresh oxygen into the
Rangzen movement. On February 13, 2013, the
TYC organised a two-day Rangzen Conference , which was attended by
around 35 independence activists.
6.The
Rangzen Conference also marked 100 years of His Holiness the 13th Dalai
Lama’s Proclamation of Tibetan Independence. Speaking at the Conference,
Dhondup Lhadar, vice-president of TYC, stressed that every Tibetan had the
responsibility to “preserve the legacy of the 13th Dalai Lama and uphold the
truth of an independent and sovereign Tibet.”
7.“More than a hundred Tibetans have given the
ultimate non-violent sacrifice of setting themselves on fire protesting China’s
occupation,” Lhadar said. “It is our sacred duty to repeat history a 100 years later and realise the return of our most beloved leader His
Holiness the Dalai Lama.”
8.The same day, activists of the Tibetan diaspora
in New York and Paris announced the formation of a Tibetan National Congress (TNC) to disseminate the views of
independence-minded Tibetans in the Tibetan community and in Tibet’s democratic government in exile.
9.A
spokesman of the TNC Jigme Ugen told Radio Free Asia in an interview as
follows:“Naturally there will be different viewpoints about what is the best
course to take, but I believe that Tibetan democracy is ready at this point for
those viewpoints to be respectfully and openly debated through constructive
political participation.”
10.“We
expect more members to come out from other organizations and from the broader
Tibetan society who really believe not just in Rangzen [independence] but in
democracy. TNC will help form a common platform.”
11.The supporters of the TNC plan to hold a global
conference in September next to work out their programme of action.The total
silence of Xi Jinping, the General Secretary of the Communist Party of China,
who took over as the President of China on March 14,2013, on the Tibetan issue
has added to the determination of the independence activists to strengthen
their movement even if its goals are at variance with the Middle Road policy of
His Holiness.
12.His Holiness has not yet expressed his views on
the emergence of the TNC, but he may not discourage any movement that uses
non-violent means for asserting the rights of the Tibetans---whether the rights
are for autonomy or independence. The Chinese calculations that somehow the
Tibetan struggle will peter out as they forge ahead with their programme for
economic development have been belied so far. The fact that the new generation
of Tibetans is even more determined than the older generation to assert Tibetan
rights indicates that the Chinese may not be able to suppress the Tibetans. (
19-3-13)
( The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director,
Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate of the Chennai Centre For
China Studies. Twitter: @SORBONNE75 )