The 14th Dalai Lama on Friday said India was no longer "over-cautious"
in dealing with China over the Tibet issue and expressed satisfaction
that the Manmohan Singh government was "more firm' as compared to past
in its bilateral engagement with Beijing.
In an exclusive interview to
HT while en-route to Tokyo, the Dalai Lama
said: "Earlier, I used to say that the Indian government was
over-cautious with China over Tibet. But now, I have changed my opinion
and I see that India is standing more firm in dealing with it. I saw
this shift when I was allowed by the Indian government to go to Tawang
in November 2009 despite reservations from Beijing."
His Holiness The XIVth Dalai Lama, Spriritual Leader
"Another example of this was that a day after visiting Chinese
defence minister Liang Guanglie claimed last September that there were
no PLA troopers in Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK), the Indian Army
chief contradicted it, saying as many as 4,000 Chinese personnel are in
the occupied area."
He, however, was concerned over reports of growing corruption in
India and hoped that for a country whose people are so spiritual minded,
it should be less corrupted.
Talking about the change of guard in Chinese leadership after the
18th National Peoples' Congress this month, the Dalai Lama said he
preferred to "wait and watch" the power transition from President Hu
Jintao to Xi Jinping before taking a call on the change of Chinese
attitude towards Tibet.
"It is difficult to say whether China will adopt a moderate line on
Tibet under the leadership of Xi Jinping as even Hu Jintao when he took
over from Jiang Zemin a decade ago talked about harmonious China. At
that time, I welcomed Hu's statement but the past 10 years have been
very difficult for Tibet. Let Xi take over China and maybe I can give a
call after watching his policies on Tibet unfold over the coming
months," Dalai Lama said.
Talking about the frozen dialogue between the Tibetan Government in
Exile and the Chinese government, Dalai Lama said that despite two
attempts - one at the behest of Deng Xiaoping between 1979-1993 and the
other during 2002-2010 - little progress has been made. "They call me a
demon and a splittist, actually it is the PLA which acts as a splittist
in Tibet," the 77 year old Tibetan spiritual leader said.
When asked whether the Chinese government was hoping that the Tibetan
struggle would fizzle out after his life-cycle, the Dalai Lama said
that he was not going to die at least for the next 15-20 years. "In
Tibet it is a struggle between the power of gun and the power of truth.
At the moment it is the gun which is ruling but ultimately it is truth
that will win," he said.
According to him, trust between India and China will only develop
once situation in Tibet returns to "absolutely normal". "The boundary
dispute cannot be solved if there is fear and suspicion between the two
countries," he said.
While discussing Buddhism, the 14th Dalai Lama confirmed that more
and more Han Chinese were being attracted to Tibetan Buddhism as they
have discovered that it does not represent "lamaism" and has the true
lineage from Nalanda in India.
Self immolations:
The 14th Dalai Lama on Saturday said it was the Chinese repression and ethnic discrimination in Tibet which was forcing young men and women to end their lives and rejected the Chinese claim that he was instigating self-immolations.
Around 70 Tibetans have self-immolated protesting against China since
the past year with seven persons burning to death between Oct 20 to 25,
2012.
"The unbearable situation in Tibet is the cause for these unfortunate
events. I am very sad about the turn of events. These are symptoms of
fear, hard line suppressive policy practiced by China in Tibet. The time
has come for China to think more realistically," he said.
Dalai Lama welcomed the Chinese government to send a delegation to
India to examine his conversations with the visitors in Dharamshala in
order to dispel any belief or notion that he was instigating
self-immolations in Tibet.
"I am a free spokesman for the Tibet issue. I take orders from fellow Tibetans and do not direct them to any action," he said.

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