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Adrian Hamilton: The Chinese will never compromise over Tibet

Thursday, 10 April 2008

The Chinese say they are still determined to take the Olympic torch through Tibet, for all the demonstrations and worldwide protests. Of course they are. The West consistently misunderstands China's attitude towards Tibet. For Beijing, it is not about the Tibetans and their treatment of them. It is about the territorial integrity of their country.

There is nothing new in what the Chinese are doing in Tibet, or to the Uighurs of Central Asia. Stalin did the same thing in the Soviet Union, moving whole populations out of areas to other parts in an effort to destroy their nationalism and pouring Russian settlers in their place. Half the problems of Ukraine, the Baltics and the Central Asian republics are the residues of this policy.

Nor is the Chinese policy of reducing local culture to a kind of tourist antiquarianism new to the world. It was, after all, what the Spanish did in Latin America, the US did with the red Indians after they had swamped the American West and what the Australians have done with the Aborigines.

When Australia's new Prime Minister, the refreshing Kevin Rudd, apologised for the "stolen generation" of Aborigines he was accepting responsibility and the shame of a deliberate policy of taking indigenous children and trying to re-educate them in Australian families on the grounds that only enforced uniculturalism could work with so backward a people. You get exactly the same approach, and racism, in the official Chinese statements on Tibet, never mind the blogs in China on the subject. But it is precisely because we have been here before that the outside world needs to be clear in our dealings with Beijing over Tibet.

It is all very well – and right – to express outrage at Chinese oppression of political voices in Tibet as if we are talking about monks in Burma or Palestinians in the West Bank. But Tibet is not Burma, an independent country suffering the oppression of its own rulers, nor Palestine, a land occupied but not claimed (or at least not all of it) by its conquerors. It would be a lot easier to work out a response if it were.

The Chinese regard their claim on Tibet as absolute and they simply will not compromise on it. And, frankly, the West, which went shamefully along with the invasion a half-century ago with only a squeak of protest, is in no mood to face a total confrontation on the issue. Calling for self-determination is easy enough, but so long as Beijing regards this as a step to unwarranted independence, the calls are going to go unheeded. Which is why the Dalai Lama has always sought not independence for Tibet but a self-governing role within China. The only trouble, as we have seen in the last few weeks, is that Beijing has no interest in this either. Their determination is not multiculturalism but the total absorption of the country within mainland China. Everything that China has done – the settlement of nomads, the building of road and rail links, the control of trade, the investment in raw materials and the insidious inducements to intermarriage is directed towards making Tibet another homogenous part of the Chinese nation. To the Chinese, this is all perfectly logical and, it has to be said, almost universally accepted. To them, the Tibetans should be grateful for everything that the Chinese have done in increasing investment, opening up transport links and encouraging immigration. If, as one official put it, the Tibetans have been left behind by the growth of Han Chinese businesses in Tibet, it is not because of exclusion but because they are "lazy" and in thrall to an outdated feudal church hierarchy. China is offering them "freedom", freedom from want and religious credulity.

Demonstrations along the Olympic torch route are not going to alter this, nor protests within Tibet. But at least they can, if only Western leaders are as courageous as the Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd – who went to Beijing and made clear his views, in Mandarin – repeat and keep repeating that the outside world does not accept this version of events, that it has an entirely different view of Chinese actions towards the Tibetan people and that it is genuinely concerned for Tibetan culture and self-expression. Not for a moment should Beijing be allowed to believe that it is persuading anyone of its version of history and the present.

And if the outside world does value Tibetan culture, there is something else that it can also do, which is to support the Tibetan refugee communities. As any visitor to some of the camps in Kerala, or elsewhere, can testify, the Indians have allowed the Tibetans in, but kept them isolated and in a dire state of poverty. The actions to exclude and drive out Tibetan refugees by that fabled, newly-democratising kingdom of Bhutan are little short of barbaric.

The Olympic protests have drawn the attention of the world, including China's, to the concern felt by the public over Tibet. Now it is up to our governments to show the same concern and resolution.

a.hamilton@independent.co.uk

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Comments

17 Comments

I know everyone is sympathetic to Tibetans, but starting to critics India for allowing Tibetans is a bit of stretch. If the West really wanted to help why not allow them to immigrate from India. As for Bhutan I think you better check your facts. Are there Tibetan refugees driven out of Bhutan? I thought it was 100,000 Nepali speaking refugees. I think you should check your facts before writing

Posted by William | 11.04.08, 07:03 GMT

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With every rising dawn there will be a new fight for freedom based on religion. Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Nelson Mandela political figures stayed in their country and fought for their cause that has made them into the greatest of men ever born. Dalai Lama a man-made God/politician in a religion that does not believe in God. A religion that is Indian it seems to the wider world the Lamas have mispresented misguided their followers all eager to find their God in this Godforsaken world and this Man-God himself escaped to India leaving his people to face their doom. For those who know little of the Tibetan history... the introduction of Lamahood that was a mere title... a sort of Knighthood that has now been turned into a re-incarnation of holy men of Tibet when the one and only Buddha himself never mentioned that he was a God and would be re-incarnated in the form of Tibetan Monks when he himself was of Indian birth. As the demands to Free Tibet is heard and demanded, the joyful togetherness of the world as Olympic torch relay is disrupted with riots and death, one must stop to have a clear understanding of what demands are being made and are they justified. In the year 2008 fingers of blame are pointed to each other the world ticks closer to its own doom as the ice melts in the Artic and Global warming is the greatest threat that mankind is due to experience, goes last on the list of world agenda's. Politicians come and go, espionage and counter espionage shaped the world of yester-years and that of the future one thing for sure until radical changes are made by those who have taken this responsibilty for whatever reasons, and if the World Leaders slowly lose the moral battle to do what is right there will be no hope for our future generations. Enough is enough! The leaders of both the Communist Countries and Democratic countries must not fail their people they must serve by example. Diplomacy is the one and only way!

Posted by Tara | 11.04.08, 02:26 GMT

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"Calling for self-determination is easy enough, but so long as Beijing regards this as a step to unwarranted independence, the calls are going to go unheeded. Which is why the Dalai Lama has always sought not independence for Tibet but a self-governing role within China. The only trouble, as we have seen in the last few weeks, is that Beijing has no interest in this either."

Do you know the fact that all of the Dalai's four brothers had been specially invited to visit China and had dialogues with officials in the past 30 years also? How do you feel when you've been fooled? Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me!

Posted by Outrageous Injustice | 11.04.08, 00:24 GMT

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"There is nothing new in what the Chinese are doing in Tibet, or to the Uighurs of Central Asia. Stalin did the same thing in the Soviet Union, moving whole populations out of areas to other parts in an effort to destroy their nationalism and pouring Russian settlers in their place. "


I was shocked by what you said. pleas show your evidence and donot tell me you just hear from LAMA. Tibetan in china they have their own scholl and their own language education, the officers of govenment are tibetan. they donot have to allow the one child policy. and maybe this will supprise you, tibetan who kill han chinense even will not get an death excuation. so, could you tell me how Chinese government should do?

Posted by river | 10.04.08, 23:30 GMT

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If Tibet was part of China then why was there a 17 point agreement forced on the Tibetan delegation to sign in China in 1951?

China claims that Tibet has always been a part of China, Tibet has a history of at least 1300 years of independence from China. In 821 China and Tibet ended almost 200 years of fighting with a treaty engraved on three stone pillars, one of which still stands in front of the Jokhang cathedral in Lhasa.

On 28th October 1991, US Congress under a Foreign Authorisation Act passed the resolution wherein they recognised "Tibet, including those areas incorporated into the Chinese provinces of Sichuan, Yunnan, Gansu and Qinghai, AN OCCUPIED COUNTRY under the established principal of international law". The resolution further stated that Tibet's true representative are the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan Government in exile as recognised by the Tibetan people.

Posted by Derek | 10.04.08, 23:00 GMT

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The average Tibetan's life and freedoms are far better under Chinese rule than they were under the Dalai Lama.

The campaign by the emigre Tibetans has no more credibility with stay-at-home Tibetans than the campaign by emigre Cubans, or any other elite group that loses power.

Elite emigre groups like the Dalai Lama's have been supported by Great Powers for centuries, and for the same reasons: they can embarrass another Great Power (always a popular policy) and they might come in handy if we ever manage to re-establish feudal serfdom, which was the policy prior to the Chinese intervention.

Posted by godfree | 10.04.08, 16:52 GMT

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Thanks for mentioning Uighur people, another people crushed by the Chinese imperialism. The persecution towards Tibetans should not stop us forgetting other nations' suffering in the hands of Chinese. China should be stopped and controlled before China reaches the Rubicon.

Posted by Yavuz Özdemir | 10.04.08, 15:23 GMT

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Aren't the US and Britain two of the countries that invaded Irag, killed hundreds of thousands, made millions into refugees and have left a wasteland in their wake. I don't believe either country or their people have any right to protest anyone.

Posted by Zeke | 10.04.08, 15:22 GMT

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What!?Barbaric Bhutanese people drove out Tibetan refugees and excluded them.?? Please check your facts properly before you make such sweeping statements. I am beginning to agree with the Chinese govt when they say that western media is biased and inaccurate when it comes to Tibet.

Posted by Ugyen | 10.04.08, 15:07 GMT

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Ten years ago, many people would have said the same about Indonesia over East Timor. However, I doubt very much that there will be a similar volte-face by Beijing, and in any event, even the Dalai Lama does not advocate independence, but rather Hong Kong-style autonomy.

Posted by Ken Westmoreland | 10.04.08, 14:48 GMT

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