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China attacks Pelosi over Tibet remarks
Foreign Desk Report
CHENGDU (China)—China attacked House Speaker Nancy Pelosi Sunday for her
recent meeting with the Dalai Lama, accusing her and other “human rights
police” of double standards and ignoring the truth about the unrest in
Tibet.
China also again accused the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual
leader, of orchestrating anti-government riots in Tibet and neighboring
provinces this month in a bid to mar the Beijing Summer Olympics and
overthrow the area’s communist leaders.
Pelosi’s visit to the Dalai Lama in Dharmsala, India, on Friday was the
first by a major foreign official since the protests broke out. The
Democratic leader said if people don’t speak out against China’s
oppression in Tibet, “we have lost all moral authority to speak on
behalf of human rights anywhere in the world.”
China’s official Xinhua New Agency published commentary Sunday accusing
Pelosi of ignoring the violence caused by the Tibetan rioters. “‘Human
rights police’ like Pelosi are habitually bad tempered and ungenerous
when it comes to China, refusing to check their facts and find out the
truth of the case,” it said.
“Her views are like so many other politicians and western media. Beneath
the double standards lies their intention to serve the interest groups
behind them, who want to contain or smear China,” it said. The Chinese
government has sought to portray itself and Chinese businesses as the
victims of the riots.
China’s reported death toll from the protests in the Tibetan capital
Lhasa earlier this month is 22. Tibet’s exiled government says 99
Tibetans have been killed. Xinhua said Sunday that 94 people had been
injured in four counties and one city in Gansu province in riots on
March 15-16. The report also said 19 rioters had surrendered in Gannan,
a prefecture in Gansu, but it did not give any details.
The violence has turned into a public relations disaster for China ahead
of the August Olympics, which it had been hoping to use to bolster its
international image.
The Chinese government over the weekend was trying to give its own
version of the events while clamping down on information coming from
Tibet and neighboring provinces. The government said through official
media that formerly restive areas were under control and again accused
the Dalai Lama, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, of trying to harm China’s
image ahead of the summer games.
“The Dalai clique is scheming to take the Beijing Olympics hostage to
force the Chinese government to make concessions to Tibet independence,”
said the People’s Daily, the main mouthpiece of the Communist Party. The
Dalai Lama called the accusations against him “baseless,” asserting that
he supported China’s hosting of the summer games.
“I always support (that) the Olympics should ... take place in Beijing
... so that more than 1 billion human beings, that means Chinese, they
feel proud of it,” he said Sunday in New Delhi, India.
The official lighting of the Olympic torch is set for Monday in Greece,
and some 1,000 police will surround Ancient Olympia to keep away
pro-Tibetan protesters from the ceremony. The torch is scheduled to
travel through 20 countries before the Beijing Olympics open on Aug. 8.
One of Thailand’s six torchbearers withdrew Sunday in protest.
Environmentalist Narisa Chakrabongse said in an open letter that she
decided against taking part in the relay to “send a strong message to
China that the world community could not accept its actions.”Despite the
media restrictions by the Chinese government, some information was
leaking out. An American backpacker who traveled to Chengdu, the capital
of western Sichuan province, said he had seen soldiers or paramilitary
troops in Deqen in northwest Yunnan province, which borders Tibet.
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