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BEIJING, May 23 (Xinhuanet) -- While most Chinese have to work 40 hours a week, the people in Tibet only work 35 hours, and they are also entitled to enjoy such official holidays as the Tibetan New Year, the Shoton (Yogurt) Festival and other traditional Tibetan festivals, apart from the official national holidays.
All this shows that the Tibet Autonomous Region
enjoys full autonomy in formulating laws and regulations according to local
conditions under the country's Law on Regional Ethnic Autonomy, says a white
paper titled the Regional Ethnic Autonomy in Tibet, issued by the Information
Office of the State Council Sunday.
According to the law, if a resolution, decision,
order or directive of a state organ at the higher level is not suitable forthe
actual situation of the region, the Tibet Autonomous Region has the right to
flexibly implement or not to implement that resolution, decision, order or
directive, upon approval by the higher authorities.
Subject to authorization, the legislative body of the
Tibet Autonomous Region may also enact and implement flexible regulations and
supplementary provisions with regard to relevant state laws based on the actual
local situation, says the paper.
Statistics show that since 1965, the People's
Congress of the Tibet Autonomous Region and its Standing Committee have enacted
220 local or separate regulations, covering political, economic, cultural,
educational and other aspects.
The enactment and implementation of these local
regulations have provided an important legal safeguard for protecting the
special rights and interests of the Tibetan people and promoting the development
of various undertakings in Tibet, the white paper says.
Meanwhile, the Tibetan people have actively exercised
the rightto vote and stand for election bestowed by the Constitution and law,
participated in the election of the deputies to the National People's Congress
(NPC) and the people's congresses at all levels in the Tibet Autonomous Region,
and participated, through the deputies, in administration of state and local
affairs.
In 2002, when re-election at the regional,
prefectural (city), county and township (town) levels took place in Tibet, 93.09
percent of electors in the autonomous region turned out to directly take part in
the election at the county level, the document says.
The Tibetan and other ethnic-minority cadres make up
the bulk of the cadres of the Tibet Autonomous Region. At present, Tibetansand
citizens of other ethnic minorities in the region make up 77.97 percent of the
functionaries of the state organs at the regional, prefectural (city) and county
levels.
A number of Tibetan and other ethnic-minority
citizens in Tibetdirectly participate in the administration of state affairs,
and some serve in leading positions in state organs at the central level. Among
all NPC deputies, 19 are from Tibet, including 12 Tibetans, says the white
paper. Enditem |