|
|
INDIA/CHINA: Dalai Lama’s Border State Visit: Purely Spiritual? Analysis by Ranjit Devraj NEW DELHI, Nov 12, 2009 (IPS) - It is hard to say whether the Dalai Lama’s sojourn this week in India’s Arunachal
Pradesh state—which China claims as southern Tibet—is a purely spiritual
exercise or a trip with a deep political mission.
"The problem is that every move of the Dalai Lama is closely watched by
Beijing and attempts are made to give a political colour to what may in fact be
a religious exercise to visit followers of Lamaistic Buddhism spread through
the Himalayan region and around the world," says Rajeswari Rajagopalan, a
senior fellow at the independent Organiser Research Foundation.
Earlier this month China's foreign ministry spokesman was quoted as saying
that the Dalai Lama was "always involved in activities that undermine the
relations between China and other countries as well as ethnic separatist
activities."
Rajeswari concedes, however, that Arunachal Pradesh holds special
significance because it was through the border town of Tawang, famed for its
large monastery, that the Tibetan spiritual leader escaped to India and into
exile 50 years ago.
Arunachal Pradesh also happens to be where the sixth Dalai Lama was born,
suggesting that it could be the site of a future incarnation—a prospect that
could prove troublesome for Beijing’s continued hold over Tibet.
"Finally," said Rajeswari, "the Dalai Lama has consistently supported India’s
claim over Arunachal Pradesh, based on a treaty signed between the 13th
Dalai Lama and British India in 1914."
Chinese official maps continue to show Arunachal Pradesh as a part of China,
and international entities such as Google Earth show the territory as disputed
—despite protests from India.
Arriving in Tawang on Sunday, on what his aides call a "teaching mission,"
the Dalai Lama expressed concern over China’s territorial claims. He told
reporters that although the Chinese army had occupied Tawang in 1962
during a brief but bloody war, it had declared a unilateral ceasefire and
withdrawn. "I am a little bit surprised," he was quoted as saying.
The Dalai Lama’s reaffirmation of Arunachal Pradesh’s status, at least as far
as his ‘government-in-exile’ was concerned, drew sharp reactions in Beijing
and suggestions that his trip to the disputed state was prompted by New
Delhi.
"The Dalai Lama went to southern Tibet at this critical moment probably
because of pressure from India,’’ wrote Hu Shishen, South Asia scholar at the
China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations, in the state-run
‘Global Times’ newspaper. "By doing so he can please the country that has
hosted him for years."
Somewhat more ominously an article in the ‘People’s Daily’ on Monday
quoted an anonymous scholar as saying that the presence of the Dalai Lama
in Arunachal Pradesh was a "double insult’’ to China. "India may have
forgotten the lesson of 1962 when its repeated provocation resulted in
military clashes. India is on this wrong track again."
On Wednesday the Chinese foreign ministry issued a statement complaining
of India’s disregard for Beijing’s concerns. "The Indian side allowed the Dalai
Lama to visit the disputed eastern section of the China-India border
regardless of China’s grave concerns, and China is strongly dissatisfied with
this."
For its part New Delhi, though firm on allowing the Dalai Lama to travel to any
corner of India he pleased to go, has chosen to play down the threats and
complaints emanating from Beijing.
India’s junior minister for external affairs, Shashi Tharoor, told reporters who
sought his comments at a meeting of businessmen on Wednesday: "India’s
territorial integrity is not negotiable. We are anxious to move on and hope
that as the visit is coming to a close, so will the conversation and rhetoric on
the subject."
Rajeswari thought that was unlikely to happen, going by past record. "Beijing
must be gearing up its propaganda machine for the post-visit period," she
said.
Recent months have seen the two Asian giants vying for regional influence
and making a presence on the global stage while bickering over visa policy,
trade imbalances and even on how the waters of the Tsang Po River, which
enters India at Arunachal Pradesh to become the Brahmaputra, can be shared.
India has announced a beefing up of troops and air power in Arunachal
Pradesh amidst reports of incursions across the McMahon line drawn up
under the 1914 treaty, which India recognises as the border but China does
not.
On the other hand, India has taken the position that any tension between the
two countries was largely "media hype" and that there was nothing between
Asia’s two giants that could not be resolved through talks.
India has also denied that there is any political significance to the Dalai
Lama’s visit to the disputed territory and said that he was going there on his
own volition rather than on any prompting from the government.
"We do not deal with the spiritual travels of a spiritual leader," Tharoor told
reporters. "As far as I am aware, the initiative would have come from him and
the government would have been informed about it."
India’s predicament is best summed up by Tenzin Tsundue, poet, writer and
Tibetan freedom activist, who argues that recognising the McMahon line
implies recognition of Tibet’s independence.
"For India to keep Arunachal [Pradesh] based on the McMahon line, the only
choice is to recognise Tibet’s independence. It cannot legitimise the
McMahon line otherwise," Tsundue, born in India to Tibetan refugee parents,
wrote in an article in the ‘Times of India’ on Wednesday.
"India may not be able to summon the courage to support the movement for
Tibetan independence overtly, but it is important that it stands firm on its
own position," Tsundue added.
That, apparently, is what India is doing.
(END)
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|