HH Dalai Lama's Tawang visit!

Rage

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'No foreign press barred from Dalai visit: India

Monday, November 09, 2009 9:41 PM IST



IANS
First Published : 06 Nov 2009 12:58:59 AM IST
Last Updated : 06 Nov 2009 01:14:19 AM IST



NEW DELHI: The government Thursday denied that it has restricted foreign journalists from covering the Dalai Lama's visit to Arunachal Pradesh later this week.

To travel to Arunachal Pradesh, a protected area permit is required.

"The ministry of external affairs, the nodal agency for foreign correspondents, recommends them to the ministry of home affairs when applications are made to visit Arunachal Pradesh," official sources said here.

"No foreign journalist has been denied a permit so far. The applications are under consideration. Due process is being followed," the sources said.

The clarification comes in the wake of a media report that claimed that the government had revoked passes previously provided to four of them, including two Associated Press journalists.

China has vehemently opposed the Tibetan leader's visit to a Buddhist monastery in Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh Sunday and has accused Dalai Lama of trying to wreck the India-China ties.

India has made it clear that the Dalai Lama, who has been living in the hill resort of Dharamsala since 1959, can visit anywhere in the country provided he does not indulge in political activities.

China claims sovereignty over Arunachal Pradesh and has opposed the visits of Indian leaders, including Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, to India's northeastern state which it suspects are aimed at consolidating India's hold over the region.


No foreign press barred from Dalai visit: India
 

GokuInd

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It's interesting to see how China's self-confidence gets shattered each time something does not work out according to them - be it Taiwan or Arunachal Pradesh.
They are a global power in the making according to power transition theories - I fear not when it comes to their childish and *****y attitude!
 

roma

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It's interesting to see how China's self-confidence gets shattered each time something does not work out according to them - be it Taiwan or Arunachal Pradesh.
They are a global power in the making according to power transition theories - I fear not when it comes to their childish and *****y attitude!
almost like a kid being denied candy eh ?
 

Rahul Singh

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And you have some sort of poll demonstrating this? Solid evidence?
Basic requirements, infrastructure and foreign policy on Pakistan are the issues which bags vote. China related talks can't even make a political leader win even in Sikkim, leave the interior. Nothing personal, but taking recent poll results as a proof is complete nonsense.
 

bengalraider

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The SFF was formed out of Tibetian refugees at the end of the sino-indian conflict in 1962 to cause havoc behind chinese lines in case of any future conflict, pictures of this unit are extremely rare and the IA for a long time did not admit the existence of such a covert unit here they are seen in tawang as part of the bodyguard of The dalai Lama


commandos


in suits
 

Rahul Singh

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Very impassive! Commandos are well equipped, MP-5 and SMG-2 are dead advanced even in 2009.
 

IBRIS

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Trillion dollor country, 3 million strong army, 1.6 billion population, security council veto holding nuke power is afraid of HH Dalai Lama. Tibetan and Indian flags put all around the Tawang Monastery: A great sight, Im sure you will also enjoy that CCP. Arunachal Pradesh state on November 9, 2009. The Dalai Lama held a mass audience with tens of thousands of devotees November 9 on a 'non-political' visit to a region near India's border with Tibet that sent shivers down the chinese spine. India has made it clear about our commitment to peaceful Tibetan people.


YouTube - Tawang: Ready, eager for the Dalai Lama
 

roma

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Trillion dollor country, 3 million strong army, 1.6 billion population, security council veto holding nuke power is afraid of HH Dalai Lama. Tibetan and Indian flags put all around the Tawang Monastery: A great sight, Im sure you will also enjoy that CCP. Arunachal Pradesh state on November 9, 2009. The Dalai Lama held a mass audience with tens of thousands of devotees November 9 on a 'non-political' visit to a region near India's border with Tibet that sent shivers down the chinese spine. India has made it clear about our commitment to peaceful Tibetan people.
YouTube - Tawang: Ready, eager for the Dalai Lama
thanks for a great post
obama is shortly due to visit india and perhaps a visit to HH DL will do him some good.

the fact that CPC is so afraid of any different ideas whould be a wake up call for the usa , long since
 

Daredevil

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Looks like China is mighty pissed-off but who cares, definitely not India.China should stop showing-off as a super power when it is not.

China says it's 'strongly dissatisfied' with India

Reuters

Beijing: China said on Tuesday it was "dissatisfied" that India had allowed the Dalai Lama to visit a disputed border region also claimed by Beijing, while also directing its ire at the exiled Tibetan leader.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said India had ignored requests to halt the trip to Arunachal Pradesh by the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader. China claims 90,000 sq km of the remote Himalayan region, that it sees as "southern" Tibet.

"The Indian side disregarded the solemn position of China in allowing the Dalai Lama to visit the disputed area of the eastern section of the China-India border region," Qin told a regular news briefing. "China expresses strong dissatisfaction about that."

With ties between the two Asian giants strained by a flare-up over their shared boundary, Beijing has sought to keep its irritation over the visit -- which it asked Delhi several times to halt -- from inflaming broader diplomatic tensions.
Beijing last week targeted the Dalai Lama instead, saying he was trying to poison the neighbours' relationship. On Tuesday, Qin again accused him of trying to undermine China.

"China firmly opposes the Dalai Lama's visit to the disputed area of the eastern section of the China-India border region. The visit by the Dalai Lama to this disputed area has exposed his anti-China nature and his attempt is doomed to failure," he said.

Thousands of Buddhist monks and supporters welcomed the Dalai Lama to the region, where he had passed through after fleeing Tibet to India in 1959 after an abortive uprising against Chinese rule.

Beijing calls the Dalai Lama a dangerous "splittist" encouraging Tibetan independence, a charge he denies.

He says he is merely seeking genuine autonomy for Tibet and describes the visit to Arunachal Pradesh as a non-political lecture tour. He told reporters in the region that he was unsurprised by China's reaction.
 

Pintu

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http://www.ptinews.com/news/370165_Dalai-Lama-has-right-to-visit-wherever-he-wants-to--US

Dalai Lama has right to visit wherever he wants to: US

STAFF WRITER 14:18 HRS IST

Washington, Nov 10 (PTI) Amid objections raised by China over the Dalai Lama's visit to Arunachal Pradesh, United States has said the Tibetan spiritual leader has the right to visit wherever he wants to and talk to people.

"The Dalai Lama is primarily an internationally respected religious figure. And he, of course, has the right to go wherever he wants and talk to people that he chooses to talk to," State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said yesterday.

On being asked about US position on the Dalai Lama's visit to Arunachal Pradesh, which is claimed by China as a disputed territory and contested by New Delhi as an integral part of India, Kelly said, "We just don't see it in any other way than that. We don't think we have a position, necessarily, on his decision to travel to this area.
 

ppgj

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Paper no. 3495 10-Nov-2009

Dalai Lama in Arunachal - Chinese Media Build up Anti-India Rhetoric

By D. S. Rajan

The Dalai Lama began his visit to the Arunachal Pradesh on 8 November 2009. The official comment regarding the visit made in advance by the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson (4 November 2009) did not blame India; it only criticised the exiled spiritual leader for trying to “sabotage China’s ties with other countries” while at the same time positively evaluating the significance of the recently held meeting between the prime ministers of the two countries in Thailand for bilateral ties. In contrast, latest comments by some scholars in the PRC’s state-controlled English and Chinese language media seem to indicate rather a new trend – connecting the visit with New Delhi’s motives.

The closest occasion when the Chinese comments came to connect the Dalai Lama’s ‘separatist activities’ to India last time was a month ago (“Dalai Lama Goes Further Traitorous Road”, China Tibet Online, 22 October 2009). The allegation at that time was that the “Dalai Clique closely cooperates with India, whenever border negotiations are held or the Indian side maliciously speculate over the border dispute”. The Chinese media now appear to be taking the level of criticism to the next stage, attributing motives on the part of the Indian government for supporting the Dalai Lama’s activities; the methodology used however looks subtle as they are mostly using Chinese scholars in this regard, avoiding direct comments as much as possible.

Anti-India media rhetoric in China began right on the day of the Dalai Lama’s arrival in Tawang. A report entitled “ Do not use the Dalai Card Against China’, published by Huanqiu (Chinese language edition of Global Times, 8 November 2009)”, declared Tawang as PRC’s territory and expressed China’s opposition to the Dalai Lama’s ‘splittist’ activities being carried out under the ‘protection given by India’. It quoted an unidentified scholar as having given a warning that ‘if India does not abandon its political manipulation of the Dalai Lama, the Chinese government, facing pressure from the people, will be forced to resort to measures for striking a blow to the Indian interests’. Interpreting various statements made in India and the US, it found that the two countries are behind the Dalai Lama’s visit to ‘Southern Tibet’.

A subsequent write-up captioned “ India Covets Dalai Lama’s Visit”(People’s Daily Online, 9 November 2009, reproduced by ‘ Huanqiu’, the Chinese language edition of the Global Times, 9 November 2009), quoted an analyst as saying that “India may have forgotten the lesson of 1962, when its repeated provocation resulted in military clashes and India is now on this wrong track again”. It then highlighted comments made by a Chinese researcher Professor Hu Shisheng, belonging to the Ministry of State Security-affiliated China International Centre for Contemporary International Relations (CICIR), that the visit is taking place at a ‘critical moment’ under India’s encouragement and New Delhi’s strategy is to weaken China’s ability in solving the ‘Southern Tibet’ issue under the principles of ‘nationality and religion’. According to Huanqiu, the scholar further observed that India is utilising the visit for making that issue sharper and sharper, so that China has to speed up a solution to the issue, “in accordance with Indian formula”, to which Beijing has to give a clear response”. (Remarks: as translated from the original Chinese language report- slightly differs with People’s Daily English version).

Another article of Huanqiu (Chinese, 9 November 2009) captioned “Indian circles are glorifying Dalai Lama’s visit to ‘Southern Tibet’, quoted Colonel Dai Xu of the Chinese Air Force, a frequent writer on India, as saying that “the people in the PRC are against India’s manipulation of and open support to the Dalai Lama’s traitorous actions as well as letting him say that ‘Southern Tibet’ is India’s territory. India’s such attitude is a ‘political’ challenge to China”.

As another Chinese signal to link India with the visit, references have been made in the Chinese language media, based on Indian media reports about the deployment of Brahmos supersonic cruise missiles by India, as a measure to ensure the security of the Dalai Lama during his visit. Huanqiu (9 November 2009) again referred to remarks made by Colonel Dai Xu that if true, such deployment is an “unprecedented military provocation” against China.

Chinese media are also exploiting the opportunity of the ongoing visit of the Dalai Lama to Arunachal Pradesh, for reasserting the PRC’s territorial claims over the ‘India-occupied Southern Tibet’. Huanqiu (9 November 2009) has carried the opinions of Liu Hong of China Tibetology Research Centre that the Dalai Lama, by saying in Tokyo that a majority of Arunachal Pradesh belonged to India prior to the Sino-Indian war and the Chinese army occupied them later, indeed ‘sold out’ his nationality and religion to India. Liu added that prior to 1959, the exiled leader never recognised ‘Southern Tibet’ as Indian territory. Huanqiu went on to say that Tawang, lying east of McMahon line, remains ‘greatest focal point’ of the Sino-Indian border issue. “The British pushed the ‘traditional and customary line’ between China and India to the North, and reached a McMahon line; India, after 1947, occupied Tawang in 1951 as well as 90000 Sq Kms of territory in the South in 1953, made McMahon line as marking the border in 1954, set up the State of Arunachal Pradesh under central control in 1986 and since then is taking steps to legalise its occupation”, Huanqiu further charged.

The Chinese media outbursts noticed prior to the meeting of the two prime ministers in Thailand were dominated by the use of harsh words like ‘consequences for India of a potential conflict with China’ and ‘the desire of India to start an immediate war with China’. Just on 4 November 2009, the People’s Daily described the ‘consensus’ reached by the two leaders during that meeting ‘as just like a gentle breeze, clearing up all the suspicion and misunderstanding that have hindered bilateral relations over the past decades’. It sounded as if there will be no more mudslinging of India by the PRC press. Now comes the counter current, disproving such expectations. Media references from the Chinese side now to the 1962 war, ‘striking a blow to Indian interests’, ‘ military provocation from India’ etc have vitiated the atmosphere once again. There could be a rehash from the Indian public opinion, bringing the situation back to square one. One can see there is an upsurge already in the Indian and Chinese nationalisms and the attitudes of the two peoples are getting sharpened on issues like that involving territory, affecting public sentiments.

The latest Chinese media pronouncements signal that Beijing does not yet take a benevolent view of India’s intentions vis-à-vis China. In particular, it seems to be unhappy with India continuing to host the Dalai Lama and the functioning of the Tibet ‘exiled government’ from the Indian soil. Notable in this connection is its recent characterisation of the ‘exiled government’ as an ‘overseas separatist group’, which remains a ‘source of turbulence for China.’ (United Front Department official Zhu Weiqun, German ‘Focus’ magazine, 5 October 2009). The PRC’s message at this juncture to India seems to be that the Dalai Lama factor has emerged as a bilateral issue equal in importance to that of the boundary question. The remarks of Premier Wen Jiabao some time back that the ‘Tibet Issue’ is a ‘sensitive’ one between China and India may have echoed the same already.

For New Delhi, important would be to assess what the latest Chinese media stand would mean for the overall Sino-Indian relations. As the boundary issue and the Dalai Lama factor get more and more intertwined, there is a possibility of further complications arising in bilateral ties. An urgent necessity for both the sides therefore may lie in their ability to handle the mistrust that may grow further with finesse and sagacity. It is hoped that the leaders of the two nations will continue to show mature statesmanship in addressing frictions as they arise; that may especially include media diatribes against each other. New Delhi and Beijing should miss no opportunity on this account, as friendship between the two nations is very important for the stability and prosperity of the 21st century Asia.

(The writer, D.S.Rajan, is Director of Chennai Centre for China Studies, Chennai, India. Email:[email protected])

http://southasiaanalysis.org/\papers35\paper3495.html
 

roma

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China still "dissatisfied" - anyone cares ? or dead topic !

China still "dissatisfied" - anyone cares ? or dead topic !

source Why China's 'strongly dissatisfied' with India

Why China's 'strongly dissatisfied' with India

NDTV Correspondent, Tuesday November 10, 2009, New Delhi

China says it is "strongly dissatisfied" with India over the Dalai Lama's visit to

Arunachal Pradesh, a Chinese news agency reported on Tuesday.

As per the report, Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said that China was strongly dissatisfied with India's decision to allow the Dalai Lama to visit the "disputed eastern section of the China-India border regardless of China's grave concerns".

China firmly opposes the Dalai Lama's visit to the region, the spokesman said at a news briefing in Beijing.

Qin said the visit "fully exposed the Dalai Lama's separatist nature", but his attempt would not succeed.

my comments : it's pretty much a dead topic by now unless of course the brahmaputra river comes into the scene
 

RAM

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India calls China 'silly' for 1962 reference

India has strongly reacted to China’s state media’s report about the former ‘forgetting the lesson of 1962’, with Shashi Tharoor calling the reference ‘silly’. “India has come a long way since 1962. Talks of India not learning a lesson are silly,” the Minister of State for External Affairs Tharoor told media persons.

"We are not woefully prepared as we were in 1962 and such language will not help. China's articulations in recent weeks has been nothing but an irritant," he said. The report published in China's state-run newspaper Global times even said that India seems to have forgotten the lessons of 1962 war. "India may have forgotten the lesson of 1962, when its repeated provocation resulted in military clashes warning. India is on this wrong track again...When the conflict gets sharper and sharper, the Chinese government will have to face it and solve it in a way India has designed," Hu Shisheng, a researcher at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations said.

Tharoor slammed the Chinese media for its jingoism. “The media there is being irresponsible in escalating tensions,” he said, adding that history does not repeat itself that easily. While China has blamed New Delhi for trying to provoke Beijing by orchestrating Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama's controversial visit to Arunachal Pradesh, India has rubbished the allegation.

"The Dalai Lama is free to travel anywhere in India... I have not heard the suggestion comes from us as we do not deal with the spiritual travels of spiritual leaders. He has to visit his flock as he sees fit," Tharoor told the India Economic Summit on Monday. He added that he was "sure that the initiative (to visit Tawang) would have come from him". Tharoor also said that India had been "very generous" by giving over "58,000 business visas" to the Chinese.


"As far as our basic policy is concerned, we would certainly be hesitant to offer employment to a foreigner for a job which could be done by an Indian in India," said Tharoor. Earlier, addressing the mass at Arunachal's Tawang, Dalai Lama said Beijing's accusations that his visit was anti-China and damaging to India-China relations are "baseless". "My visit to Tawang is non-political and aimed at promoting universal brotherhood and nothing else," the Nobel Peace laureate had said

India 1962 war news-Tharoor calls China `silly` for saying India has forgotten 1962
 

RPK

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It’s not 1962, India tells a China fuming at Dalai Lama visit

New Delhi/Beijing, Nov 10 (IANS) Wary of the Chinese practice of using state-controlled media to air provocative views, India Tuesday described as a “bit silly” a Chinese daily’s comment that India had not learnt its lessons from 1962 war. “Such language” will not help bilateral ties, India underlined.
India’s reaction came on a day China voiced its “strong dissatisfaction” and accused India of “disregarding the solemn position of China” in allowing Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama to visit Tawang in Arunachal Pradesh, which Beijing claims to be part of what it calls “south Tibet.”

“Talk of India not learning lessons from 1962 is silly. We are far from 1962 and history does not always repeat itself,” Minister of State for External Affairs Shashi Tharoor said here.

“We are not woefully prepared as we were in 1962 and such language will not help. China’s articulations in recent weeks have been nothing but an irritant,” Tharoor said.

He was reacting to a report published in China’s state-run newspaper Global Times in which Hu Shisheng, a researcher at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, said that India seemed to have “forgotten the lesson” of the 1962 war.

“India may have forgotten the lesson of 1962, when its repeated provocation resulted in military clashes. India is on this wrong track again,” Hu wrote.

“When the conflict gets sharper and sharper, the Chinese government will have to face it and solve it in a way India has designed,” he wrote.

Hu’s remarks were seen here as a sign of China’s increasingly aggressive posturing and its unhappiness with New Delhi for letting the Dalai Lama visit Arunachal Pradesh, India’s northeastern state over which Beijing claims sovereignty.

Venting its “strong dissatisfaction” with India, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang Tuesday said in Beijing that India had ignored requests to stop the Dalai Lama’s trip to Arunachal Pradesh.

“The Indian side disregarded the solemn position of China in allowing the Dalai Lama to visit the disputed area of the eastern section of the China-India border region,” Qin told reporters.

“China expresses strong dissatisfaction about that.”

The visit “fully exposes the Dalai Lama’s separatist nature,” Qin said. “His attempt will not succeed.”

India Monday made it clear that the Dalai Lama’s visit to the state was on his own initiative and underlined it had nothing to do with it.

“The Dalai Lama is free to travel anywhere in India… I have not heard the suggestion comes from us as we do not deal with the spiritual travels of spiritual leaders. He has to visit his flock as he sees fit,” Tharoor had said Monday.
 

ppgj

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The Moral Defence Rests

Tenzin Tsundue 11 November 2009, 12:00am IST

When Manmohan Singh clearly and courageously said last month that there was no question of his government cancelling the Dalai Lama's Arunachal
Pradesh visit, i was proud. As refugees in India, it is painful for us Tibetans to witness Beijing bureaucrats laying down the law to our host government in arrogant, bullying terms. This visit's historic importance is that it swings back focus on the McMahon Line and therefore Tibet. That's why China was so impatient to shoot it down. The result of this pivotal visit will be a realisation that, without reinstating Tibet as a buffer zone, India will forever be subjected to pressures: militarily, politically, environmentally and, now, over water.

Many Indians do not realise the pressure that Beijing is exerting on New Delhi. They portray the visit as yet another China-Dalai Lama showdown. The fundamental problem China has is with Indian borders. It did not need a Dalai Lama to add to its rants. Dealing with China is tricky; a capitalist nation, ruled by a Communist-style party in the name of socialism, is aggressive and hugely defensive. One cannot lose a point; concede one point and you become subordinate. That is why Barack Obama has armed himself for his first Beijing visit as US president with Dalai Lama power, prepared to punch home points with Chinese President Hu Jintao. After facing Hu, he will still get to meet the Dalai Lama.

A unique bond with the Monpas of Buddhist Tawang has led to the 14th Dalai Lama's fifth visit to India's ''Land of Dawn-lit mountains''. The programme at Tawang monastery is solely to impart Buddhist teachings. It is at a most appropriate time, when the Indian government needs to assert its territorial rights in Arunachal Pradesh. In the face of China's strident claims over Arunachal, the Tibetan leader's spiritual visit to his followers legitimises India's stance in the most significant yet entirely non-verbal manner.

Historically, Tawang was Tibetan territory until early last century. Even today many families in the region retain ancestral tax papers for making payments to the government of Tibet. During the Chinese invasion of Tibet, India unilaterally declared the McMahon Line as the border and swiftly evicted the remaining Tibetan officials from the local administration in 1950. Arunachal Pradesh as a state was formed in 1987; till then it was part of the North East Frontier Agency.

The 6th Dalai Lama by virtue of his birth in Tawang in 1683 made sacred this 2,000 sq km region. The Great 13th Dalai Lama ceded the region to British India in 1914 by signing the bilateral McMahon Treaty in Delhi. The 14th incarnation is today symbolically and silently gifting it again to India. The Dalai Lama and his government-in-exile in Dharamsala have repeatedly confirmed that they honour the 13th Dalai Lama's decision. For the Tibetan populace, within and outside Tibet, Arunachal Pradesh is a part of India.

In 2004, Sun Yuxi, then Chinese ambassador to India, made that ill-phrased claim over Arunachal not just Tawang, he said, but ''the whole of it''. Former Indian prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee rescued Sikkim from China's ambitions by surrendering India's remaining authority to speak on Tibet and, recently, a Chinese map portrayed Kashmir as an independent country.

China is not going to stop there since Beijing refuses to recognise the 1914 McMahon Line and the Simla Agreement also. It is most likely to question the territorial integrity of the remainder of the 890 km McMahon Line, the Demchok region in eastern Ladakh and the Sumdho area of the eastern Himachal Pradesh border. Having one of its vital military installations at Sumdho (Tibet: trisection) between Tibet and Himachal's Lahaul-Spiti, India is expected to counter any attempts on Sumdho with armed might.

As schoolboys in a Tibetan refugee camp, we used to be marched out once in a while for Free Tibet protest rallies. We shouted slogans in Tibetan and English but never understood this phrase in Hindi: ''Tibbat ki azadi, Bharat ki suraksha'' (Tibet's independence is India's security). It never made sense to me until later, when i realised how India had accepted Tibetan refugees fleeing Chinese persecution, nurtured us and reinforced us not with guns but with education.

The Tibetan armed resistance, based in Mustang, western Nepal, and disbanded in 1974, was later reconstituted into a Tibetan battalion in the Indian army known as Establishment No 22, a classified paramilitary force deployed in important operations like the Kargil war. Today, 7,000 Tibetan soldiers under the ministry of home affairs - man the most difficult and dangerous borders in India's mountainous terrain.

For India to keep Arunachal, based on the McMahon Line, the only choice is to recognise Tibet's independence. It cannot legitimise the McMahon Line border otherwise. Faced with this political reality, India may not be able to summon the courage to support the movement for Tibetan independence overtly, but it is important that it stands firm on its position.

The writer is a Tibetan activist.

The Moral Defence Rests - Edit Page - Opinion - Home - The Times of India
 

RPK

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China effect? Centre asks Dalai Lama to amend schedule

New Delhi: Has India finally bowed to China's objections to the Dalai Lama's visit to Arunachal Pradesh? The Tibetan spiritual leader has reportedly been asked to amend his programme by the state government.


The Dalai Lama was asked to convert his public address to a religious discourse on the eve of his departure for Dirang and Bomdi La. The government had earlier cancelled the Dalai Lama's visit to a monastery in the heart of Tawang for security reasons.


Arunachal officials have also denied extension requests of inner line permits to journalists, as they fear the Dalai Lama is being asked too many questions about China.


Organisers of the Dalai Lama's visit have also withdrawn volunteers of the India-Tibet Friendship Society. On Sunday, the first day of the visit, these volunteers had miniature Indian and Tibetan flags on their T-shirts.


But External Affairs Ministry sources have told CNN-IBN that the restrictions were imposed at a local level and that the Centre has nothing to do with it.


Meanwhile, the state government on its part is also denying imposing any restrictions.


Arunachal Pradesh Chief Secretary has said, "All media reports are baseless. We have not suggested anything to the Dalai Lama. He is free to move anywhere in the state. The state government is not doing any rescheduling. His itinerary remains the same."


The restrictions though did not prevent thousands of his followers from gathering at Tawang. For the fourth consecutive day, the town remained closed for about six hours as almost all its residents went to attend the Tibetan leader's discourse.
 

Rage

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Centre curbs Dalai Lama, tells media to leave Tawang

Keshav Pradhaan & Prabin Kalita, TNN 12 November 2009, 12:40am IST


TAWANG/BOMDI LA (ARUNACHAL PRADESH): Although the government maintained that it would not interfere with the high-profile Dalai Lama visit to
Arunachal Pradesh, state officials on Wednesday asked the Tibetan leader to amend his programme and ordered reporters covering his trip to leave Tawang.

On the eve of the Dalai Lama's departure for Dirang and Bomdi La in West Kameng, state officials asked him to convert a public address, which was scheduled to take place in Tawang, into a religious discourse. "Keeping the sensitivity of the area, we've advised His Holiness to amend his programme," said a senior official. The direction came a day after Beijing reiterated its objection to Dalai's visit to the area that China claims as its own.

Around the same time on Wednesday, Arunachal officials flatly rejected extension requests of inner line permits (ILPs) for reporters, including TOI's, who had travelled to the border area to cover the two-day trip to West Kameng district. "We've got instructions not to extend ILPs beyond the Dalai's Lama's stay in Tawang," said one official.

ILPs are mandatory for non-state residents who want to visit Arunachal. "Our officers reprimanded us for allowing the media to get close to the Dalai Lama. They said journalists were asking all sorts of questions about China," said a paramilitary officer as he stopped TOI correspondents at the Yid-Gha-Choezin Monastery in Tawang from covering the visit.

On Tuesday, it was later learnt, the government had cancelled the Dalai Lama's visit to a monastery in the heart of Tawang. Organisers of his visit also withdrew volunteers of the India-Tibet Friendship Society. On Sunday, the first day of the visit, these volunteers had miniature Indian and Tibetan flags on their T-shirts.

Despite the restrictions imposed in Arunachal Pradesh, the Dalai Lama continued to draw thousands of followers. For the fourth consecutive day, Tawang remained closed for about six hours as almost all its residents went to attend the Tibetan leader's discourse at the Yid-Gha-Choezin Monastery. He was also scheduled to visit the Urgelling Monastery on the outskirts of Tawang, where the sixth Dalai Lama was born in the 17th century. The present Dalai Lama is 14th in the lineage that began over 650 years ago.

Despite the chilly weather, unprecedented enthusiasm and joy was seen along the 186-km stretch from Tawang to Bomdi La, the route the Dalai Lama had taken during his sensational flight from Tibet in 1959. All shops, including eating houses, were closed. Local Buddhists draped the road with thousands of five-colour religious flags and erected welcome arches with sacred motifs at numerous places. Till evening, the Dalai Lama's followers were seen going to Dirang and Bomdi La to listen to his discourses over the next two days. "We are all thrilled to find god's reincarnation among us," said Pema Thondup, a former Assam Rifles jawan from Themang, as he walked to the venue of the Dalai Lama's discourse at Dirang.


Centre curbs Dalai Lama, tells media to leave Tawang
 

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Dalai Lama ends public teaching in northeast India

By MUNEEZA NAQVI- Associated Press Writer


TAWANG, India — The Dalai Lama exhorted thousands of his followers to maintain Buddhist culture as he closed a series of public teachings Wednesday in a northeastern Indian region near his homeland of Tibet in a visit that has drawn protests from China.

The exiled spiritual leader's trip to the remote Himalayan region of Arunachal Pradesh, the subject of a long-running border dispute between India and China, has increased already high tensions between the regional rivals.

The Dalai Lama said at the start of his trip Sunday that his mission was not political but a purely religious visit to local Buddhists.

"It's important for us to preserve our traditions and our culture. You must work hard to preserve these," the Dalai Lama told thousands crowded into a dusty playground in the town of Tawang on Wednesday.

Dancers, many of them in elaborately painted masks, performed at the last day's ceremonies.

The Dalai Lama, who has lived in exile in India since he fled Chinese-controlled Tibet in 1959, made no mention of China in his last public address in Tawang, saying only that the most "profound and detailed" expression of Buddhism was to be found in Tibet.

India brushed off China's demand to bar the Dalai Lama from visiting the region that has been under dispute since the two nations fought a border war in 1962.

Beijing opposes most activities of the Dalai Lama, whom it accuses of agitating for independence for Tibet. The Nobel Peace Prize laureate insists he only seeks autonomy for Tibet to practice its unique Buddhist culture.

India has tried to downplay the tensions with China, barring the foreign media from covering the trip and working to keep the Dalai Lama away from local reporters.

Thousands have attended the Dalai Lama's teachings since they began Monday. Many of them were poor villagers who had walked for miles (kilometers) through narrow and winding mountain paths to catch a glimpse of their spiritual leader.

Followers from the local Monpa tribe, dressed in maroon and black wool coats and stiff black hats made of yak hair, were the largest presence, but followers from across the country, neighboring Bhutan and also included a handful of Western visitors.

"I'm sad that he is leaving, but we have received his blessings and that is a great thing for us Buddhists," said Tsering, a local resident who uses only one name. "Seeing him and listening to him preach has made me very, very happy."

The Dalai Lama departs Thursday morning and will stop in a few other Buddhist monasteries before wrapping up his trip with a visit to the state capital, Itanagar, on Saturday.


Dalai Lama ends public teaching in northeast India | Penn State News | World - Centre Daily Times
 

Rage

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Centre curbs Dalai Lama, tells media to leave Tawang

Well, well, well, well well. I guess the ba$tards finally got their way.

The spineless govt. was simulatin' after all.

We can all say: brouhahahaha
 

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