Mar 19, 2007

Tibet: China Talks Tough


Chinese President Wen Jiabao has repeated China’s opposition to greater autonomy for both Tibet and Taiwan, suggesting it remains unwilling to compromise.

Below is an extract from an article written by Tim Johnson and published by ContraCistaTimes.com;

 

BEIJING - Premier Wen Jiabao on Friday repeated claims that the Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual leader of Tibet, threatens the unity of the nation and may be trying to separate his Himalayan homeland from China.

Surveying the situation in crucial outlying regions within China's sphere, Wen also criticized what he called "plots taken by secessionist forces" in Taiwan, the self-ruled island that China claims, and praised Hong Kong for having the "freest economy in the world."

Wen's remarks came in an annual news conference that's the only chance for journalists to question China's senior leadership.

Speaking for two hours from a rostrum bedecked with flowers, Wen discounted any chance that he would meet with the Dalai Lama, who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989, unless the Dalai Lama categorically accepted China's dominance of Tibet.

Wen called on the Dalai Lama, who heads a government-in-exile in a hilltop town in India, to state publicly that Tibet "is an inalienable part of China's territory" and to make a similar statement on Taiwan. Once that occurs, "we are willing to have consultations with the Dalai Lama on his personal future," he said.

But Wen said the Dalai Lama advocates "a so-called high degree of autonomy for Tibet," which he indicated was unrealistic.

"In his request, he actually asked for all the Chinese troops to withdraw from Tibet and he even asked for all the Han people to leave Tibet," Wen said. "From all he has said, it is very easy for us to see whether he is genuinely working for a unified country or whether he is trying to sabotage or undermine the unity of the country."

Chinese troops marched into remote Tibet in the 1950s, and the Dalai Lama fled into exile in 1959. In recent years, he has affirmed that he wants autonomy for Tibet, not independence, but China doesn't believe him.

China finished a 715-mile railway linking it to Lhasa, the Tibetan capital, last July. Last week, the Dalai Lama said Han Chinese, who make up 93 percent of China's vast population, are flooding into Tibet.

"It is a source of deep concern that ever since the railway line became operational, Tibet has seen a further increase in Chinese population transfer," he said.

The Tibet government-in-exile contended in a statement Thursday that thousands of Chinese fortune-seekers and laborers arrive daily by rail to Lhasa. The population of Lhasa, which stood at 20,000 in 1950, is climbing toward 300,000, and Beijing has a target of letting it grow to 700,000, the statement said.

Envoys of the Dalai Lama and Beijing have held five rounds of talks since 2002, when contacts were renewed after two decades. But talks stalled in February 2006.

Wen called the upcoming year a crucial one for Taiwan Strait relations, noting that the island has elections next year to replace President Chen Shui-bian, who has inched Taiwan toward outright independence.

"We are closely watching the various actions and plots taken by the secessionist forces in Taiwan on the road toward seeking independence," Wen said, warning that China would never allow Taiwan to take such action.

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