Special report: Dalai clique's separatist activities
condemned
By Xinhua writer Cao Kai
BEIJING, March. 31 (Xinhua) -- The Dalai Lama always
describes himself as "a simple monk", but what he has done in the past few
decades indicates that he is also a politician who goes around the world doing
things that don't square with his words.
It's hard to imagine that a simple monk could be so
busy on the world stage. Currently on his agenda are trips to Seattle in the
United States, London and Nantes, France. On his travels, he's expected to meet
high-ranking officials including British Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
These are just some of his global travels over the
past five decades.
In 1951, the Chinese government signed a 17-point
agreement with Tibetan representatives. The Dalai Lama later telegraphed
chairman Mao Zedong, saying the local Tibetan government and Tibetan monks
supported the central government's leadership.
On Oct. 1, 1958, he wrote in the People's Daily, in
his role as a vice chairman of the top legislature, the National People's
Congress, that the Tibetans had enjoyed full freedom and equality since
returning to the motherland.
However, several months later, the Dalai Lama
supported an armed insurgency in Tibet. He fled to India after it failed and
formed a "government in exile".
Since then, he has betrayed his home country and
fellow Tibetans time and again with repeated calls to separate Tibet from China,
which is far beyond what a simple monk would do.
He is preaching "peace" and "human compassion" and
seeking "benefits" for the Tibetans when he shuttles around the world by air,
receiving accolades here and there.
But the self-proclaimed spiritual leader has
obviously forgotten his identity, abused his religion and played too much
politics.
He has never renounced the "Tibetan Exile
Constitution", an outlawed document similar to the "Future Tibet Constitution"
drafted in 1963, which proclaimed the establishment of an "ethnically unified
state led by the Dalai Lama".
In 1987 and 1988, he proposed a "Five Point Peace
Plan" in the U.S. Congress and a "New Seven-point Proposal" in the European
Parliament, supporting Tibetan independence.
In recent years, the Dalai Lama has repeated that he
did not seek independence but instead sought a high degree of autonomy for Tibet
within the framework of the Chinese Constitution.
Under the Dalai Lama's autonomy claim, Chinese troops
should leave Tibet. Also, Tibet could maintain diplomatic relations with other
countries and international organizations, which is tantamount to admitting
Tibet's independence, said An Cedain, a researcher with the Center for Research
on Tibet.
Meanwhile, the Dalai Lama is expanding his
pro-independence infrastructure. His 13th government in exile, established in
2006,has seven ministries: civil affairs, foreign affairs and media, religion
and culture, education, finance, health and security. In 1959, his first such
government had only four ministries.
To make this government in exile status more
credible, the Dalai Lama and his supporters produced a "Tibetan national anthem"
and "Tibetan national flag", which had never existed before 1959.
Students in overseas Tibetan schools must sing the
anthem and hoist the banner at their opening ceremonies, which demonstrates the
Dalai Lama's transparent goal of independence.
During the latest riots in Lhasa, he disassociated
himself from the conspiracy as an innocent monk, merely admonishing his
followers in reported statements "not to resort to violence" after the
disturbances.
An article in the New York Times said "the Dalai Lama
was a poor and poorly advised political strategist".
If the Dalai Lama, 73, really wishes to be a simple
Buddhist monk, it's high time for him to stop playing politics and cheating
people, Westerners in particular, with his hypocritical "autonomy" claims.