BEIJING, Nov. 24 (Xinhua) -- Tibet Daily, a leading
newspaper in the Tibet Autonomous Region, southwest China, has condemned the
Dalai Lama and his supporters for their continued support of secession by
violent means while waving the banner of "peace."
After the March 14 riot in Lhasa, the capital of
Tibet, in southwest China, the Dalai Lama sent his personal representatives to
talk with the Central government in Beijing.
In the talks, Dalai Lama's representatives promised
not to support the following: any activities against the Beijing Olympiad; any
plots organizing violent criminal activities; the violent "Tibet Youth
Congress"; and any advocacy and activities in favor of secession, said the
paper.
But the secessionists had failed to keep their word,
said the paper, referring to a series of incidents in August, such as the
disruption and disturbances in front of Chinese missions in foreign countries to
threaten the security of the Chinese diplomats, involving over 16,000 Tibetans,
and a number of foreigners employed by secessionists to protest in Beijing.
It also blamed secessionists for organizing three
terrorist attacks involving explosives in the Qamdo Prefecture, in the eastern
part of the autonomous region, adjoining Sichuan Province.
According to the paper, since July 28, the "Tibet
Youth Congress" had launched a series of "hunger strikes" in New Delhi, India,
and on August 7, they started the second stage of the Tibetan People's Uprising
Movement.
On Aug. 13, the Dalai Lama confessed at the French
parliament that Tibetans might have carried out violent acts. But he did not
condemn them. This proved that the Dalai Lama and his supporters are behind the
violence, the commentary said.
The paper recalled what secessionists had done over
the past five decades, ranging from the 1959 armed riots in Tibet, armed attacks
in the 1960s-70s, and the 1989 riots in Lhasa.
The paper also had a brief look back on the terrorist
history of the "Tibet Youth Congress" since it was founded in 1970. The terror
group held training courses on the use of explosives. In January 2007,
secessionists claimed that it had trained 450 activists. In April this year, the
police received tips from monks and lay people, and captured a large number of
weapons from temples in Tibet and elsewhere.
Since the 1980s, the secessionists have tried to
internationalize the "Tibet Question" and have advocated non-violence to entice
support from the international community, but they have never stopped their
activities to pressure people and local governments in Tibetan-dominant areas.