China Invites New Talks With Dalai Lama
Announcement Comes On Heels Of Tibetan Leader Saying He'd "Given Up" On Talks With Beijing
-
The Dalai Lama speaks to the students at the Tibetan Children's Village School in Dharmsala, India, where he attended the 48th founding anniversary of the school, October 25, 2008. (AP Photo/Ashwini Bhatia)
-
Photo Essay Dalai Lama Lauded The spiritual head of Tibet's Buddhists receives prestigious Congressional Gold Medal.
-
Photo Essay Tibet Protests Protests break out across Asia as China clamps down on anti-government protests in Tibet.
The Xinhua News Agency said the meeting would be held "in the near future" but did not give a specific date.
Discussions will take place despite anti-government riots this spring in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa and "some serious disruptions and sabotages to the Beijing Olympic Games by a handful of 'Tibet independence' secessionists," the report said, citing an unnamed Chinese government official. It did not elaborate.
The Dalai Lama and his government should "treasure this opportunity and make a positive response to the requirements set forth by the central authorities," the official said.
The last round of discussions - the seventh since 2002 - ended in an impasse in July, with China demanding that the 73-year-old Nobel peace prize winner prove he does not support Tibetan independence and disruption of the Olympics in August.
The self-proclaimed Tibetan government-in-exile, in Dharmsala in northern India, said the Dalai Lama had been "tireless" in expressing his commitment to nonviolence and had gone out of his way to publicly announce his support for the games, which were a tremendous source of national pride for Beijing.
The Chinese Foreign Ministry said Wednesday it had no details on the talks. Spokeswoman Jiang Yu on Tuesday urged the Dalai Lama to "better understand the situation, demonstrate sincerity and do something good for the Tibetan people in his lifetime."
Telephones rang unanswered at the United Front Work Department, the central government department in charge of previous meetings.
In Dharmsala, Tibetan government-in-exile spokesman Thupten Samphel said he had no immediate comment.
Wednesday's announcement came a day after Tibetan officials in India said the Dalai Lama had called a special meeting of Tibetan exile communities and political organizations next month to discuss the future amid foundering talks with China.
The five-day gathering, scheduled for mid-November, could mark a significant shift in the Tibetan strategy for confronting Beijing, which has governed the Himalayan region since communist troops occupied it in the 1950s.
The Dalai Lama, who fled to India amid a failed uprising in 1959, has followed a "middle way" approach with China, which means he wants some form of autonomy that would allow Tibetans to freely practice their culture, language and religion.
But over the weekend, he said at a public function in Dharmsala that he had "been sincerely pursuing the middle way approach in dealing with China for a long time now but there hasn't been any positive response from the Chinese side."
"As far as I'm concerned, I have given up," he said in an unusually blunt statement.
In March, peaceful demonstrations against Chinese rule in Lhasa exploded into violence. Beijing says 22 people were killed in the riots, in which hundreds of shops were torched and Chinese civilians attacked.
China then launched a massive crackdown in Tibet and a broad swath of Tibetan areas in the country's west regions. Tibetan exile groups said at least 140 people died. More than 1,000 people were detained, although human rights groups say the number could be higher.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- No again.
Prior the Olympic, many western media has been so bias, one-sided negative reporting on in many issue toward China, Thus, to make easy political attack. That proved to be all false.
It seems that bias is going to start again. What a lie and bias statement "peaceful demonstartions or planned attack to arose attention before Olympic?
"peaceful demonstrations against Chinese rule in Lhasa exploded into violence...."
"Tibetan exile groups said at least 140 people died. More than 1,000 people were detained, although human rights groups say the number could be higher."
Where is the prove? just quoting this extrme special interest terror group to conlude as the result? What kind of news media is this?
" - Reply to this comment
- The problems in Tibet are over Oil & Natural Gas. Tibetans are being driven off their land for Big Oil & Gas Consortiums. The people of Tibet will not see any benefits by greedy multi-national corporations.
Chinese researchers have discovered massive new gas and oil deposits totaling an estimated 4 billion to 5.4 billion tons in Tibet in southwestern China, the newspaper China Daily reported. September 5, 2001 UN Global Policy Forum
China s lucrative natural resources in the west are gaining international investment and political support, regardless of the accuracy of its oil and gas reserve estimates in the Qiantang basin. Already, BP has invested $578 million in Chinese oil company PetroChina, and along with ENI/Agip, is aiding its drilling on the Tibetan plateau.
HONG KONG, July 4 ,2002 (AFP) - Chinese energy giant PetroChina Co, has signed a framework agreement with an international consortium led by Dutch/Shell Group to build an 8.5 billion dollar east-west gas pipeline, it announced Thursday.
Shell, along with consortium partners ExxonMobil of the United States and Russia s OAO Gazprom, will each have a 15 percent share. - Reply to this comment
- Another media biased report that caused the drop in the confidence of the developing world in the neurality of reports
- Reply to this comment
Author Thomas Friedman on Obama's Afghanistan plan and the war on terror.




