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Beijing: Tibetan Monks must be more "patriotic"

posted Sunday, 6 April 2008

More on Beijing's shameful behavior in Tibet, and on its efforts to control the Tibetan people by controlling their religion and religious practices. This time from the Pen of Tini Tran, and care of the Washington Post.

The full and original article with a slide show may be found here.

China to Beef Up 'Patriotic' Education

BEIJING -- China vowed Saturday to ramp up a campaign requiring Tibetan Buddhist monks to denounce the Dalai Lama and declare their loyalty to Beijing.

But resentment over "patriotic education" has ignited protests that have left eight people dead in recent days in a southwestern province and could fuel future unrest despite a massive security presence aimed at quelling the demonstrations.

The Tibet Daily newspaper reported Saturday that the government pledged to "strengthen patriotic education" especially among young monks to help them "become patriotic, religion-loving and law-abiding."

"We should strengthen patriotic education so as to guide the masses of monks to continuously display the patriotic tradition and uphold the banner of patriotism," the paper quoted Hao Peng, Tibet's deputy Communist Party chief, as saying.

China has been using the much-reviled practice of enforcing patriotism education for more than a decade in an attempt to exert greater control over religion. The practice requires monks to do ritual denunciations of their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and accept the Chinese-appointed Panchen Lama, the second-highest ranking Buddhist leader.

The campaign had exacerbated tensions in Tibet in the months before anti-government demonstrations exploded in mid-March in the region's capital, Lhasa, and neighboring provinces.

The protests are the longest and most sustained challenge to China's 57-year rule in the Himalayan region. China's subsequent crackdown has drawn international scrutiny and criticism in the run-up to this summer's Olympic Games.

Chinese authorities say 22 people died in anti-Beijing riots that broke out March 14 in Lhasa. The Tibetan government-in-exile says up to 140 were killed in the protests and ensuing crackdown.

Beijing has accused Dalai Lama supporters of orchestrating the violence, a charge the spiritual leader has repeatedly denied.

China imposed a military clampdown on a large swath of the western part of the country in an effort to rein in the anti-government demonstrations. But continuing unrest continued, partly ignited by the compulsory patriotic education.

Overseas activists groups say eight people were killed in the latest round of deadly protests in the southwestern Sichuan province on Thursday. State media reported late Friday that one government official was seriously injured in what it described as a riot.

The incident was sparked when a team of government officials attempted to enforce patriotic education at the Tongkor monastery in the Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, according to the London-based Free Tibet Campaign and the International Campaign for Tibet.

But the monks refused to criticize the Dalai Lama, and thousands of paramilitary troops searched the monastery for pictures of the exiled Tibetan leader. Two monks were detained after his pictures were found in their quarters.

Troops opened fire on a crowd of several hundred Buddhist monks and several hundred more citizens who had marched on local government offices in Donggu town to demand the release of the monks, the activist groups said.

The U.S. government-funded Radio Free Asia said Saturday it had unconfirmed reports that up to 15 people were killed and dozens more injured in the violence.

The official Xinhua News Agency had no information on deaths or injuries but confirmed that a riot broke out near government offices in Donggu. An official was "attacked and seriously wounded," and police were "forced to fire warning shots and put down the violence," Xinhua said.

Calls to local police and hospitals in the area were unanswered Saturday or else officials said they had no information.

The Tibetan Center for Human Rights and Democracy, based in India, also announced Saturday that two monks committed suicide last month in Sichuan's Aba County following government oppression. Aba County has been the scene of large protests involving hundreds of monks and citizens.

One monk, identified as Lobsang Jinpa, from the Aba Kirti Monastery killed himself March 27, leaving a signed note saying "I do not want to live under Chinese oppression even for a minute," the human rights group said.

The second suicide occurred March 30 at the Aba Gomang Monastery, when a 75-year-old monk named Legtsok took his life, telling his followers he "can't beat the oppression anymore," the group said.

It was impossible to verify the information since Chinese authorities have banned foreign reporters from traveling to the region.

In India, police arrested 17 Tibetan exiles as they attempted to march from the remote Himalayan region of Ladakh in northern India into Tibet, according to local official M.K. Bhandari. Ladakh is home to about 7,000 Tibetan exiles.

The exiles have been arrested for violating the law that prohibits entry into sensitive border areas.

When a secular state forces monks to denounce their spiritual leaders, you know that said state has no face left. It's given up winning the hearts of the people and is now desperately trying to control their minds instead. It's not new, but its worse than any time over the last decade or so.

By the time Beijing has finished with Tibet it won't be Tibet any more, it will just be another artificially constructed Han province. One that is devoid of all of the things that make Tibet special and unique, and of most of the things that make Han culture special and unique, too.

ACB recalls that Japan did pretty much the same thing in China and Korea, but ACB thinks that this irony will be lost on most Chinese nationalists.

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1. poncho left...
Monday, 7 April 2008 3:10 am

"Free Tibet, All Natives worldwide retake control"


2. The Masked Millionaire left...
Tuesday, 8 April 2008 1:46 am :: http://www.TheMaskedMillionaire.com

The only reason China has any power is because the world is giving it to them. If all of us were to boycott China things would change in a hurry.


3. ACB left...
Tuesday, 8 April 2008 2:11 am

If the US were to boycott China, half of its retail sector would go under almost overnight and its economy would turn up its toes.

You would need maybe 2 years to prepare for a boycott of Chinese goods. This is the time that would be required to build the factories elsewhere and to train the workers and managers in order to replace China. And even then it would go very hard in the world. English speaking Western nations in particular because of their consumer cultures.


4. Julndy left...
Wednesday, 9 April 2008 2:42 am

will boycott china work? Don't forget China had 89 embargos before, aslo the isolations of both the USA and USSR. One may argue the economy is different, it is more intergaded, but it will change little.


5. ACB left...
Wednesday, 9 April 2008 3:19 am

A Boycott of China will hurt the West too much for them to stomach it. America's economy is consumer driven, and its consumer markets are built around Chinese goods. Take away Chinese goods and the US economy will falter long before alternate sources can be found.


6. Bill left...
Wednesday, 9 April 2008 8:55 am

Yes, boycotting China will hurt US and other western nations. But to do the right thing, sometimes it takes sacrifice. US and the western world are not so unprincipled as to support a cruel and authoritarian regime and not to help those being persecuted. So, the price of goods in Walmart may rise for a few months, until Walmart can find other suppliers in India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Africa, Philippines, Pakistan, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Mexico, Brazil, Czech, Slovakia, Poland.... China is not the only country that can make inexpensive goods.

Right now, the labour cost in China is rising. The cost advantage of Chinese goods is now gone. We should not buy from China anymore, even only on economics.


7. ACB left...
Friday, 11 April 2008 3:44 am

Ah, but what you are forgetting is that many of the factories in China are Western backed. If America boycotts Chinese goods then the American companies that have invested in them will loose billions in investments.

You are also forgetting that it takes time, money and expertise to build factories and to train factory workers. It won't take months to replace China, it will take years. Chinese factories with years of experience can throw out far more products per worker/day than newly setup factories in other countries could. you'd have to build the factory, find floor workers and management teams, build supplier relationships, set up supply lines, and all of the things that American companies have spent years and years doing in china, and you'd have to do it from a very low starting level.

Many US companies would collapse before alternative sources of goods could be found. We're not talking about a few dollars on the price of a DVD player and a T-Shirt. We're talking massive shortages, price rises in the 100s of %, for months and months. In the time that it takes to get all of those new factories on line companies like Wal-Mart would be forced to file for Chapter 11. They'd loose most of the cheap consumer goods that they stock and would either be forced to buy more expensive alternatives or to go without stock. In turn this would loose them the custom of America's lower and middle tier consumers. People who either could not afford the more expensive alternatives of who would wait until prices went down again. This would massively hit stores sales levels and profit margins, which would hit their share values, which would not only further hurt their profit margins, but which would also hurt their ability to raise the capital needed to actually build the new factories required to replace Chinese goods.

On another note. China is one of the world's largest holders of US currency and dept. If the US boycotted China then China could sell it. This would cause the dollar to devalue, which would make it much harder for US companies to invest in the factories needed to replace Chinese factories, and would put up the price of cheap goods from elsewhere.

At the end of the day you might find yourself having to buy an expensive high range Japanese DVD player instead of a cheap Chinese DVD player, and buying it with dollars that are worth far less than they used to be. The US economy could not stomach this for long enough to replace China.