Thursday, December 12, 2024
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US envoy urges China on Tibet

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Washington: The US ambassador to China urged Beijing to re-examine policies toward Tibetans as he acknowledged that he had quietly visited monasteries during a spate of self-immolation protests.

Ambassador Gary Locke, speaking from Beijing to an online forum in the United States, said he stopped at monasteries last month in the flashpoint Aba prefecture to “get an appreciation of Tibetan culture and the way of life”.

Aba, an ethnically Tibetan area of Sichuan province, has been a hotbed of protests against Beijing’s rule. Some 60 ethnic Tibetans, many of them monks and nuns, have set themselves alight since February 2009 in Sichuan and Tibet.

“We implore the Chinese to really meet with the representatives of the Tibetan people to address and re-examine some of the policies that have led to some of the restrictions and the violence and the self-immolations,” Locke said. “We have very serious concerns about the violence, of the self-immolations, that have occurred over the last several years,” he said, calling the incidents “very deplorable”.

“Nobody wants that type of action, or of people having to resort to that type of action. Too many deaths,” he said.

Locke called for China to show respect for Tibetans’ religion, culture and language.

The United States has repeatedly urged China to address Tibetan grievances but it is very rare for foreign officials or media to visit Tibetan areas on unsupervised trips.

In previous statements Washington has urged China’s leaders to resume dialogue with Tibet’s spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, who fled into exile in India in 1959 and enjoys strong public support in the United States.

China’s foreign ministry on Tuesday rejected what it called foreign interference and repeated its claim that the “Dalai group” is responsible for “instigating and masterminding” self-immolations.

“At the same time I want to point out that Tibetan affairs are China’s internal affairs,” said spokesman Hong Lei. “We oppose any country or any person interfering in China’s internal affairs in any form.”

The details of Locke’s visit emerged as President Barack Obama’s administration looks for new ways to promote human rights in China, which regularly lashes out at US condemnation of its record.

Obama has faced election-year criticism from Republican rivals, who have urged him to be more outspoken on Beijing’s human rights record and its trade and currency practices. (AFP)

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