Thursday, March 6, 2025
spot_img

China to step-up control in Tibetan monasteries

Date:

Share post:

spot_img
spot_img

Beijing: China will step-up its control on the management of the numerous Buddhist monasteries in Tibet and its prefectures in the wake of recurring self-immolations by monks, which it alleges are instigated by the Dalai Lama. Senior officials of Tibet Autonomous Region have pledged stepped-up efforts to strengthen the management of monasteries in the fight against the Dalai Lama group, official new agency Xinhua reported.

“It is a top priority to maintain stability, enhance unity, and promote harmony in Tibet because it concerns the stability of the nation”, Basang Toinzhub, Deputy head of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) Tibet committee, said at a meeting.

Toinzhub said the committee will focus this year’s work on helping the government strengthen the management of monasteries to push forward the patriotic and legal education among monks and nuns. His speech came only a day after Chen Quanguo, Tibet’s top official, made a similar pledge, the news report said.

In his visit to Lhasa’s Sera Monastery Saturday, Chen told the monastery’s monks that stability is not only good for the nation and people but also good for the Tibetan Buddhism and its monasteries. Chen’s remarks followed self-immolation attempts by eleven monks and two nuns mostly from Kirit monestary in Aba country of the Sichuan province demanding the return of the Dalai Lama from his exile as protesting curbs on laity.

Chen urged monks to cherish the current unity and stability and unswervingly fight against the separatist activities of the Dalai Lama group.

According to recent official figures, Tibet has more than 1,700 religious sites, accommodating 46,000 monks and nuns. Nearly 90 per cent of the region’s 2.8 million people, mostly ethnic Tibetans, are devout Buddhists. Thousands of local officials were sent to Tibet’s monasteries and take turns to stay there as “station cadres” to strengthen monastery management after the deadly riots of March 14, 2008, the report said.

They worked for promoting the legal awareness of monks and nuns and dissuade them from being duped by separatist forces and ensure the normal practice of Buddhism, it said.

The Dalai Lama, who went into exile in India in 1959, was blamed by the Chinese government to have pulled the strings behind many of the disturbances in the Tibetan region including the 2008 riots in Lhasa, which led to the death of at least 18 civilians and one policeman, it said. (PTI)

spot_img
spot_img

Related articles

Delhi Metro will have longest single-city network in world by Dec: Manohar Lal

New Delhi, March 6: Minister of Housing and Urban Affairs Manohar Lal on Thursday said that by December...

Mob besiege police station in Dhaka, call for release of accused in sexual harassment case

Dhaka, March 6: In yet another incident of lawlessness in Bangladesh, an agitating mob identifying themselves as "Tawhidi...

Christians hold peaceful dharna against anti-conversion law in Arunachal

Itanagar, March 6: Thousands of people under the banner of the Arunachal Christian Forum (ACF) held a peaceful...

Bhutani and WTC Groups: Dark web of corruption exposed, buyers seek justice

New Delhi/Gurugram, March 6: With the Directorate of Enforcement (ED) raiding the real estate companies WTC Group and...