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Author Topic: Senior U.S. Congressional delegation makes rare Tibet trip  (Read 393 times)
msc_de (OP)
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November 18, 2015, 11:16:18 PM
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Senior U.S. Congressional delegation makes rare Tibet trip
Reuters
November 12, 2015 9:51 PM

http://news.yahoo.com/senior-u-congressional-delegation-makes-rare-tibet-trip-025119361.html

BEIJING (Reuters) - A top Chinese leader on Thursday said China allowed a visit to Tibet by a senior U.S. Congressional delegation, including Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, a long time critic of China's human rights record in the region.


China has ruled Tibet with an iron fist since 1950, when it was "peacefully liberated" by troops of the People's Liberation Army, and trips there by Western reporters and political figures are rare.

Meeting Pelosi in Beijing's Great Hall of the People, Zhang Dejiang, the head of China's largely rubber-stamp parliament, the National People's Congress, said he was pleased to see her looking well.

"Madame Pelosi, you have been to Tibet," said Zhang, the third-ranked Communist Party leader.

"I was concerned about your health. I can see there is nothing wrong with your health. This shows your health is very good. I want to first hear your impressions of your visit to Tibet."

Pelosi responded that she had shared some views on Tibet at an earlier meeting, and hoped "some of that conversation will be useful as we try to talk about some other subjects as well".

View galleryU.S. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi smiles during …
U.S. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (2nd L) smiles during a bilateral meeting with Zhang Ping, V …
In front of reporters, she made no other comments about the visit, which had not been officially announced ahead of time.

The official Tibet Daily said Pelosi praised the huge changes that had taken place in Tibet and the hard work of the Chinese government in protecting religious freedom and cultural traditions.

Asked about the newspaper report, Pelosi spokesman Drew Hammill said: "The only thing we have been confirming is that they were in Lhasa from Monday through Wednesday. We have not offered any characterization of the trip whatsoever".

The report also cited Chen Quanguo, Tibet's Communist Party boss, as saying he hoped the United States would not support any separatist activities or allow the Dalai Lama to visit.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei described the visit as "a normal exchange between the U.S. and Chinese legislatures".

Rights groups and exiles say China tramples on the cultural and religious rights of Tibet's Buddhist people. China strongly denies the charges and says it has brought much needed development to what was a backward region.

Pelosi has regularly spoken out about human rights issues in Tibet and has met the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, whom Beijing reviles as a violent separatist. The Dalai Lama says he simply wants real autonomy for Tibet.

Jim McGovern, chairman of a Congress Human Rights Commission, accompanied Pelosi in the delegation.

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard and Megha Rajagopalan; Editing by Nick Macfie and Clarence Fernandez)
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November 19, 2015, 10:03:10 AM
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Tibetan people have bi-lingual education their native language and Mandarin, they openly practice their religion which is everywhere. Palatial Buddhist Temples built high atop mountains and the Buddhist presence EVERYWHERE guilt with gold leaf beautiful facilities, Buddhism is thriving in Tibet while signs of PRC are rarely seen. In my view it is the Buddhists who are ripping off the Tibetan people.
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November 19, 2015, 07:59:20 PM
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Tibetan people have bi-lingual education their native language and Mandarin, they openly practice their religion which is everywhere. Palatial Buddhist Temples built high atop mountains and the Buddhist presence EVERYWHERE guilt with gold leaf beautiful facilities, Buddhism is thriving in Tibet while signs of PRC are rarely seen. In my view it is the Buddhists who are ripping off the Tibetan people.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1118002.0
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November 19, 2015, 07:59:32 PM
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Tibetan people have bi-lingual education their native language and Mandarin, they openly practice their religion which is everywhere. Palatial Buddhist Temples built high atop mountains and the Buddhist presence EVERYWHERE guilt with gold leaf beautiful facilities, Buddhism is thriving in Tibet while signs of PRC are rarely seen. In my view it is the Buddhists who are ripping off the Tibetan people.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1121076.0
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November 20, 2015, 11:03:04 PM
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photo resource : Pelosi office

http://www.rfa.org/mandarin/yataibaodao/shaoshuminzu/dz-11182015104059.html
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November 21, 2015, 11:27:08 AM
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US Lawmakers Shown False ‘Peace And Calm’ in Lhasa During Visit to Tibet
2015-11-20 

http://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/pelosi-11202015170710.html

A visit to Tibet’s regional capital Lhasa by U.S. lawmakers last week was highly staged, with all signs of a typically heavy security presence removed from central areas in the city before the delegation’s arrival, according to a source inside Tibet.

U.S. Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi led a delegation of six lawmakers to the normally tense and tightly controlled city—the scene of violent 2008 protests against Chinese rule—on Nov. 10 for a three-day visit, a local resident told RFA’s Tibetan Service this week.

“On the eve of the visit … Chinese officials in Lhasa ordered 10 members from each division of each township, and six members from each neighborhood, to participate in staged religious activities,” RFA’s source said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

“They were summoned from all sectors of the Lhasa city government jurisdiction and forced to circumambulate around the religious sites, while the monasteries in the city were directed to organize religious activities during the three days.”

According to the source, many of the people called to stage religious activities “were paid for their participation.”

“Therefore, it would have been very difficult for Nancy Pelosi and others to see the true status of religious freedom in Tibet,” he said.

The source said that all of the metal-detector gates used to scan people entering the Jokhang—Lhasa’s central cathedral—and the police tents regularly pitched in the central Bakhor district were removed from the area before Pelosi’s arrival.

“The U.S. delegation did not see even one of those restrictive gates, so the visitors might have got a false impression of peace and calm in the area,” he said.

“In reality, the situation is very different.”

The delegation was shown a Potemkin Lhasa where religious freedom and economic progress is enjoyed by all, the source said.

“They likely did not see any of the darker aspects of Tibetan life in Lhasa, and thus [didn’t understand the problems] in the wider Tibetan region,” he said.

“Whatever they saw was all staged and part of a deceptive plan to paint the wrong picture, so it is important for all to know the truth.”

Confidential letter

The Tibetan government-in-exile on Friday cited a “confidential letter” from a resident of Lhasa who said the city was under a severe lockdown in late October and early November, and described repressive measures taken by the Chinese government to silence Tibetans ahead of the delegation’s visit.

“Lhasa was placed under extreme repression and the people were being constantly indoctrinated in political thoughts, using both violent and softer approaches,” said the letter, according to the report by the Central Tibetan Administration in Dharamsala, India.

“Free speech was also severely curtailed. So much so that people felt it difficult to even move their bodies.”

The letter echoed the account of RFA’s source, saying the gates to Barkhor, which were constantly guarded by security personnel, “were all of a sudden removed and replaced with new doors and lesser security.”

“We were confused at first for the cause of these replacements. However, we realized their intent after learning about the U.S. delegation’s visit,” the letter said.

The letter welcomed the fact-finding visit to Lhasa and expressed the Tibetan people’s desire to meet with the delegation, but acknowledged that it would be hard for Pelosi and the other lawmakers to learn the aspirations of Tibetans because their visit was being guided by Chinese authorities.

‘We saw what they wanted’

On Tuesday, Pelosi and the other members of the delegation—Democratic Representatives Jim McGovern of Massachusetts, Betty McCollum and Tim Walz of Minnesota, Joyce Beatty of Ohio and Alan Lowenthal and Ted Lieu of California—thanked Chinese President Xi Jinping for inviting them on the state visit, which also included stops in the capital Beijing and Hong Kong.

McGovern, the co-chair of the bipartisan Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, said it was clear that the Chinese government “has invested a great deal in Tibet,” but warned that the investment “should not come at the price of an entire culture.”

“You cannot confine a people’s culture and heritage—their very sense of identity—to a museum or a market of handicrafts,” he said.

Pelosi, who has been highly critical of the situation in Tibet, agreed that China’s government was not doing enough to preserve the traditions of the Tibetan people.

“It’s beautiful if the Chinese government spends a lot of money to gild the temple roof … but we’re interested in what’s happening in the minds of the children, and the education and the perpetuation of the culture there,” she said, adding that a large scale resettlement of majority Han Chinese to the region is “diluting that culture.”

The lawmakers were also quick to acknowledge that their delegation had been guided by handlers and encountered difficulty meeting with Tibetan residents of the city.

“I think it’s fair to say that … the Chinese government wanted to control as much of our visit as they could. And we saw what they wanted us to see,” McGovern said.

Pelosi said that 30 Chinese officers guiding their delegation “is probably a conservative estimate because there were people who—shall we say—had walkie talkies that may not have been identified as security” joining the entourage through Lhasa, making sure the lawmakers stuck to a prescribed route.

“Well, what they wanted us to see was housing. And we did,” she said.

“Did we see families? I’m not sure.”

Ambassador visit

In June 2013, sources in Tibet told RFA that a visit to the region by then-U.S. Ambassador to China Gary Locke was met with a similarly staged welcome, including police officers dressed as Tibetans from remote rural and nomadic communities, carrying prayer wheels and rosaries in their hands.

During his trip, Locke emphasized the importance of preserving the Tibetan people’s cultural heritage, including its unique linguistic, religious, and cultural traditions, the U.S. State Department said at the time.

A riot in Lhasa in March 2008 followed the suppression by Chinese police of four days of peaceful protests by Tibetans, and led to the destruction of Han Chinese shops in the city and deadly attacks on Han Chinese residents.
More than a dozen civilians were killed in the clashes, according to various reports.

The riot sparked a wave of mostly peaceful protests against Chinese rule that spread across Tibet and into Tibetan-populated regions of western Chinese provinces.

Hundreds of Tibetans were detained, beaten, or shot as Chinese security forces quelled the protests.

Meanwhile, a total of 143 Tibetans to date have self-immolated to challenge Beijing’s rule in Tibetan-populated areas and to call for the return of exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.

Reported by Sonam Wangdu for RFA’s Tibetan Service. Translated by Karma Dorjee. Written in English by Joshua Lipes.
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