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China summons
US envoy over Dalai Lama award
BEIJING—China slammed the United States on Thursday for awarding the
Dalai Lama one of its highest honors and summoned the U.S. ambassador in
Beijing to complain, saying its actions had “gravely undermined”
relations.
The Dalai Lama, who has lived in exile in India since fleeing his
predominantly Buddhist homeland in 1959 after a failed uprising against
Communist rule, received the U.S. Congressional Gold Medal from
President George W. Bush on Wednesday.
China, which considers the Dalai Lama a separatist, had already
denounced the award as a “farce” that would hurt relations between
Beijing and Washington.
“The move of the United States is a blatant interference in China’s
internal affairs, hurts the feelings of the Chinese people and has
gravely undermined relations between China and the United States,”
Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao told a news conference.
“We urge the United States to take concrete steps to remove the terrible
impact of its erroneous actions.” Liu did not elaborate on how the
United States might repair the damage, saying only that Washington was
“very aware of what kind of steps it can take.”
Many in Tibet consider the Dalai Lama their spiritual leader but any
allegiance to him in the tightly controlled region risks harsh
repression. Liu said that before the Communists took control of Tibet,
the Dalai Lama was responsible for a “dark and cruel” system of serfdom.
After he fled, “he never ceased conniving and manipulating Tibetans
abroad with actions aimed at splitting China.” Underscoring the
sensitivity of the Tibet issue within China, Liu’s earlier comments on
the Dalai Lama’s award were removed from transcripts on the Foreign
Ministry’s Web site.
The Dalai Lama told a packed audience in the U.S. Capitol he had “no
hidden agenda” in seeking greater autonomy but not independence for his
Himalayan homeland. He said Beijing’s depiction of his motives was
“unfounded and untrue” and asked U.S. supporters to convince China he
was sincere.
In Washington, Bush called on China to open talks with the Dalai Lama,
but Liu poured cold water on such a prospect. “As we can see from the
activities of the Dalai Lama, I do not find any sincerity in him,” he
said. China and envoys of the Dalai Lama have held several rounds of
dialogue, but they have yet to bridge any distance on the issue of how
Tibet should be governed or whether the Dalai Lama will eventually be
allowed to return. The United States is the latest country after Germany
and Australia to incur the wrath of Beijing over visits this year by the
Dalai Lama.
President George W. Bush and top US legislators were set Wednesday to
lead an unprecedented official US tribute to the Dalai Lama, bucking
China’s angry warnings of crippled Sino-US relations. In a 1:00 pm (1700
GMT) ceremony at the Capitol, Bush is scheduled to deliver brief remarks
and hand Tibet’s spiritual leader a US Congressional Gold Medal — the
highest civilian award bestowed by US lawmakers.
It will be the first time a sitting US president appears in public with
the 72-year-old Buddhist figurehead. On Tuesday, Bush and the Dalai Lama
met privately for 30 minutes in the ornate “Yellow Oval” room in the
White House residence — far from the formal diplomatic trappings of the
Oval Office in an effort to placate the Chinese. “We in no way want to
stir the pot and make China feel that we are poking a stick in their
eye,” said White House spokeswoman Dana Perino. The point of the meeting
was to pay tribute to “a great spiritual leader” and endorse greater
religious freedom in Tibet, Perino said. Mindful of Beijing’s role in
efforts to defuse the Iranian and North Korean nuclear crises, the White
House toned down the symbolic overtones of the Tuesday meeting by
declining to specify a time of the event, or release a photograph, or
specify what had been discussed. Beijing was not appeased.
Foreign ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao on Wednesday called the meeting
a “gross interference in China’s internal affairs” and urged that the
medal ceremony be canceled.—Agencies
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