Special report: Tibet: Its Past and Present
BEIJING, May 28 -- The Austrilian newspaper Sydney
Morning Herald published an article by its columnist Paul Xian on May 19
entitled "Shift from feudalism no easy leap". The article is as follows:
The rule of the monks and the land-owners was neither
enlightened nor just. In 1959, when Beijing resumed full control, life
expectancy in Tibet was only 35. Illiteracy was 90 per cent. Infant mortality
was a disgraceful 43 per cent. Per capita income was less than $40. Poverty was
the real ruler of Tibet.
Today, life expectancy has almost doubled to 68.
Literacy is more than 90 per cent. Infant mortality is 2.4 per cent. Per capita
income has exploded to $1500. The population of Tibet has increased from 1
million to 2.8 million, which remains 92 per cent ethnic Tibetan. All the while
Tibet has remained a palpably Buddhist society.
None of this happened because of Tibetan self-rule,
but because Beijing opened a multibillion-dollar funnel into the Tibetan economy
which continues to provide more than 90 per cent of Tibet's income. Romanticism
and self-reliance had nothing to do with this transformation.
Nor is Tibetan culture easily decoupled from China.
The majority of ethnic Tibetans living in China live outside Tibet.
Context is everything. During the past 30 years,
China has been evolving at cultural light-speed. It has packed more than a
century of social and economic evolution into a single generation. China is
attempting to transform an abiding tradition of absolutism within two
generations.
Boycotting the Olympics over Tibet, which represents
just 0.2 per cent of China's population, would do more harm than help to this
transformation. Besides, Olympic boycotts have a proven record of futility.
None was effective. None achieved more than transient
symbolism. To throw the 2008 Olympics into chaos over Tibet would thus be
overkill, disproportionate and counterproductive, in support of a dubious moral
argument.
The recent demonstrations in support of Tibetan
independence have been a carefully co-ordinated boutique public relations
operation rather than an outbreak of mass demonstrations.
Video records of demonstrations in Tibet show an
ugly, racist side to the unrest as ethnic Tibetans (but not monks) kicked, beat
and stabbed Han Chinese, along with the ransacking and looting of Han-owned
businesses. The Government had no choice but to intervene with force.
China has a long history of civil war. For more than
a millennium, it has lived under a sequence of dictatorships, absolute
monarchies and uncompromising feudalism. To move so vast a culture so quickly
has required the Government to retain a firm grip on the centrifugal forces that
could tear the country asunder.
(Source: CRIENGLISH. com)