Blinken ups US’s ante on Tibet in Delhi visit

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Published : Jul 28, 2021, 8:01 PM IST

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The ongoing visit of the US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken to New Delhi is one replete with significance as far as the Tibet question goes, writes senior journalist Sanjib Kr Baruah.

New Delhi: The official programme schedule of visiting US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken in the national capital on Wednesday packed a surprise that escalated the US’s moves on Tibet to another level which may attract China’s ire. Besides scheduling meetings with the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, foreign minister Dr S Jaishankar and National Security Adviser Ajit Doval later on Wednesday, Blinken’s first meeting for the day was with Kasur Ngodup Dongchung, the director of the Bureau of the Dalai Lama in Delhi.

The next meeting with civil society representatives included Geshe Dorji Damdul, director of Tibet House in Delhi. The other attendees in the meeting included constitutional lawyer Menaka Guruswamy, Inter-Faith foundation founder Khwaja Iftikhar Ahmed, and representatives of the Ramakrishna Mission, Baha’i, Sikh and Christian NGOs. The primacy of Tibetan representatives in the two meetings by Secretary Blinken reflects the US’s concerns on deciding the successor to the Dalai Lama, the spiritual head of Tibetan Buddhism who is based in Mcleodganj in India’s Himachal Pradesh.

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Besides Taiwan and its treatment of Uighurs in Xinjiang, China is very sensitive to any developments on the issue of Tibet. The development follows an increasing focus on the issue of succession of the Dalai Lama, 86, who is the 14th in his line. In 2011, China claimed the sole right to approve and appoint the next Dalai Lama who will be chosen by picking lots from a golden urn in Lhasa.

Calling China’s position “an outrageous abuse of religious freedom”, India and the US believe that the Chinese government should have no role in the succession process of the Dalai Lama. The stand of the Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) is that choosing the next Dalai Lama is the prerogative of the current Dalai Lama who is based in India and that Beijing can have no say in the matter.

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On May 21, China’s State Council Information Office brought out a white paper which said that the Chinese Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) officially established the titles of the Dalai Lama and Panchen Erdeni and their political and religious status in Tibet. It said: “From then on, it became an established convention that the central government conferred the titles of Dalai Lama and Panchen Erdeni”.

Interestingly, in a huge indication of the changing stance of the Indian establishment when it came to the Tibetan leader, for the first time, Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke to the Dalai Lama on the telephone on the occasion of his 86th birthday on July 6. Any official contact with the Dalai Lama was scrupulously avoided by the government in the past as it was thought that such interaction would anger China.

Xi’s Tibet Visit

On the other hand, in a sudden visit on July 22, China’s President and chairman of the Central Military Commission Xi Jinping appeared in Lhasa with the Potala Palace, the Dalai Lama’s official residence, looming large in the backdrop. As President, it was his first visit to the Tibetan capital.

Just the day before on Wednesday, President Xi had flown to Tibet’s border city of Nyingchi and landed at the Mainling airport, a few km away from Tuting, just across the border in India’s Arunachal Pradesh. It may be that Xi’s sudden visit sought to convey the domineering control of Tibet by Beijing and the self-determined right to decide who will succeed the Dalai Lama.

Read:| Blinken meets Tibetan monk during India visit, sends signal to China

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