Article and Transcript of interview with His
Holiness Dalai Lama
Dalai Lama plans Tibet crisis remarks
Sunday
Until now, he has avoided issue at Seattle
conference on compassion
The Dalai Lama laughs with Washington Gov. Christine
Gregoire after he said that men — not women — were to blame
for the world's problems. He appeared before 50,000 people on
the second day of his visit to Seattle.
The Dalai Lama laughs with Washington Gov. Christine Gregoire
after he said that men — not women — were to blame for the
world's problems. He appeared before 50,000 people on the second
day of his visit to Seattle.
SEATTLE - The Dalai Lama said Sunday that Tibet cannot make
any more concessions to China and renewed his calls for the
government to cease suppression in his former homeland and
withdraw troops.

The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader denied Chinese claims that he
has called for Tibet to be split from China and that he is behind
recent turmoil, saying instead that he is committed to pursuing
Tibet’s right to autonomy.

“The whole world knows that the Dalai Lama is not seeking
independence, nor separation,” he said at a news conference
Recent protests in Tibet against five decades of Chinese rule
have been the largest and most sustained in almost two decades
and have fueled protests that have disrupted the global torch
relay for this summer’s Olympic Games in Beijing.

“Our struggle is with a few in the leadership of the People’s
Republic of China and not with the Chinese people,” the Dalai
Lama said in a statement released after the news conference. “If
the present situation in Tibet continues, I am very much
concerned that the Chinese government will unleash more force
and increase the suppression of Tibetan people.”

He said that if the Chinese stop such suppression and withdraw
armed police and troops, he would advise all Tibetans to stop their
protests.

Monks detained
A Chinese official said Sunday that the government had detained
nine Buddhist monks and accused them of planting a homemade
bomb that reportedly detonated March 23 in a government office
building in eastern Tibet, according to China’s official Xinhua
News Agency.

There were no known deaths or damage from the first reported
bombing since anti-government demonstrations by monks began
March 10 in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa.

Xinhua reported that the monks from the Tongxia monastery
fled after a bomb exploded March 23. They later confessed to
planting the explosive, Xinhua said. The agency did not explain
why the incident was not reported earlier.

The Dalai Lama, visiting Seattle for the five-day Seeds of
Compassion conference, told journalists Sunday that there have
been some talks between representatives of his government-in-
exile and Chinese officials.

The talks date to 2002 and some progress was made, but by July
2007 the discussions had deteriorated, he said. He did not
elaborate.

The Dalai Lama repeated his promise to resign should the
violence in Tibet continue. But he criticized China’s attempt to
suppress demonstrations and encouraged any Tibetan protesters
to conduct nonviolent demonstrations.

The Olympic torch is scheduled to pass through Tibet and India in
a few weeks, and he said that if demonstrations are carried out,
more hardship might come to the Tibetan people.

Superpower status and trust
The Dalai Lama said he supports China’s ambitions to become a
world superpower, saying that the country has achieved the
economic and military might to do so but lacks transparency. If
China wants to be a superpower, he said, it needs the world’s
trust.

The economic rise of China has widened the gap between the rich
and poor, he said. Along with issues coming from a “totalitarian
regime,” China is seeing problems not only in Tibet, but also
throughout the country.

“Particularly in China, everything is state secret; I think these
practices are outdated,” he said.

The Dalai Lama fled to India after a failed uprising in 1959 in
Tibet, but he remains the religious and cultural leader of many
Tibetans. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989.

In Beijing, Xinhua on Sunday denounced the Dalai Lama and his
supporters as "anti-human rights," and slammed top U.S. House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., as "the least popular person in
China" for her stance on Tibet.

A Tibetan source with strong contacts in Lhasa said the city was
also swirling with rumors of fresh clashes between monks and
security forces at the important Drepung monastery. No one at
the monastery or the local police station could be reached for
comment.
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