Tibet receive 13 billion $+ subsidy From Beijing

satish007

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India also has tons of poor women and a fairly severe rape/dowry problem. Maybe they could solve it by exporting some women to unmarried Chinese men. I think many poorer Indian girls would be happy with that bargain lol
What's the hell you post is, that's 13 billion subsidey, how come it relate to Indian women, very offensive, say sorry or you may be put into the jail.
 

huaxia rox

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prcs plan is a great leap forward in the west part.....the plan is not tibet or xinjiang oriented.......they just happen to fall in......

besides money is not the only thing tibet needs.......infrastrtue like dams or other power stations should be built.......it should be a rich area not just for you to go travelling and right now it just needs some morden tech to transfer.........
 

Ray

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India also has tons of poor women and a fairly severe rape/dowry problem. Maybe they could solve it by exporting some women to unmarried Chinese men. I think many poorer Indian girls would be happy with that bargain lol
In China it is more interesting.

Those who get raped or report rape gets jailed!

some justice, right?

The mother of an 11-year-old girl raped and forced into prostitution in central Hunan Province in 2006 is to impeach two local policemen she claims raped her daughter.

Meanwhile, Tang Hui, who was sent to a labor camp for eight days last August for protesting too light sentences of others convicted in her daughter's case, said she would continue to take legal action for compensation over her detention after the Yongzhou City Re-education through Labor Management Committee rejected her request last Friday.

Woman Jailed For Fighting Daughter's Rape Case
 

Ray

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China sure cares for Tibetans.

China cracks down on Tibet protests

Beijing arrests 70 in ethnic Tibetan areas as it steps up efforts to blame Dalai Lama for self-immolations in protest at Chinese rule


government says it has detained 70 people in ethnic Tibetan areas as it cracks down on self-immolation protests against Chinese rule.

Beijing has stepped up its efforts to blame the exiled Tibetan leader, the Dalai Lama, for the protests, in which nearly 100 Tibetan monks, nuns and lay people have set themselves on fire since 2009.

The harsh measures are a sign new Chinese leaders installed in November are not easing up on Tibet despite international condemnation.

The protesters are calling for Beijing to allow greater religious freedom and the return from exile of the Dalai Lama, who lives in India.

The latest detentions took place in an ethnic Tibetan area of Qinghai province, which borders Tibet, the government's Xinhua news agency announced late on Thursday. It said 12 of those detained were formally arrested but gave no details of the charges.

Beijing has responded to the protests by sending in security forces to seal off areas and prevent information from getting out, arresting protesters' friends and seizing satellite TV dishes. Despite that, the pace of self-immolations accelerated in November as the ruling Communist party held a leadership transition.

The government has blamed the burnings on hostile foreign forces that want to separate Tibet from the mainland.

The burnings have galvanised many Tibetans, who see them as selfless acts of sacrifice, making it hard for authorities to denounce the immolators.

On Thursday, Voice of America, a US-government-financed broadcaster, denied accusations by Chinese state television and a government newspaper that it encouraged the burnings. The US state department has expressed concern about the "deteriorating human rights situation in Tibetan areas" and the use of criminal laws against people associated with protesters.

"Our concern is that there are deep grievances within the Tibetan population which are not being addressed openly and through dialogue by the Chinese government," said a department spokeswoman, Victoria Nuland.

Nuland said Washington urged Beijing to "engage in a substantive dialogue" with the Dalai Lama. "We continue to call on Chinese government officials to permit Tibetans to express their grievances freely, publicly and peacefully, without fear of retribution," she said.

China cracks down on Tibet protests | World news | guardian.co.uk
Hangoaxia rox,

Note: not Indian source!
 

Ray

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prcs plan is a great leap forward in the west part.....the plan is not tibet or xinjiang oriented.......they just happen to fall in......

besides money is not the only thing tibet needs.......infrastrtue like dams or other power stations should be built.......it should be a rich area not just for you to go travelling and right now it just needs some morden tech to transfer.........
I love these Chinese Great Leaps.

Reminds me of Mao's claim that that Chinese are frog in the well.

Frogs given their weight and dimension, do have great leaps.

But then Mao was 70% right and 30% wrong! ;) :rofl:
 

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