English >> Channels >> China
Don't meet Dalai Lama, Bush urged
  08:25, October 17, 2007 [Font big medium small] [BBS] [Print] [Close]
 
Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi yesterday urged US President George W. Bush to cancel a planned meeting with the Dalai Lama, warning it can have "an extremely serious impact" on bilateral relations.


Bush and the Dalai Lama - viewed by China as a political exile who has long engaged in separatist activities - were scheduled to meet at the White House yesterday on the eve of a public ceremony to award him the US Congressional Gold Medal.


"We express our extreme dissatisfaction and strong opposition. We solemnly demand that the US side cancel the extremely wrong arrangement," Yang told reporters on the sidelines of the 17th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC).


The meeting will be a gross violation of the norms of international relations and it severely hurts the feelings of the Chinese people, said Yang, who is also a delegate to the Party congress. "The Chinese side has made solemn representations on this many times."


The planned meeting will be the third since the US leader took office in January 2001, but will be the first time a sitting US president appears in public with the Dalai Lama.


The Dalai Lama poses as a Buddhist spiritual leader, but is actually a cat's paw for some people, Qiangba Puncog, chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region, said at a separate briefing on the sidelines of the congress.


"The meeting is not the first, nor will it be the last. But his influence is very limited," said Qiangba Puncog, also a delegate to the Party congress.


Tibet's Party chief Zhang Qingli also voiced his indignation.


"The Dalai Lama has never stopped his secessionist activities since he fled China 48 years ago," Zhang said. "How can someone who does not love his own country, and even seeks to split it, receive a welcome in some countries and even get awards?"


The Tibetans' quality of life has greatly improved in the past decades and they know very well who really cares for their well-being, Zhang said.


According to Qiangba Puncog, contacts between the central government and the Dalai Lama have been ongoing, but the dialogue was not going well.


"The central government's policy is consistent. The Dalai Lama must give up his 'Tibet independence' claim and all secessionist activities, and admit that Tibet is an inalienable part of China," he said.


"Although we have had many contacts, the Dalai Lama has never abandoned 'Tibetan independence'," he said. "Under such circumstances, there cannot be major progress."


The central government has never closed the door on consultation and contacts with the Dalai Lama even though he has done a lot to undermine Tibet's social stability, he added.


Source: China Daily
 
 Related News
 Official: Dalai Lama's U.S. award not to affect Tibet's stability
 China strongly urges the U.S. to cancel arrangement on gold medal award to Dalai Lama
 China opposed to medal for Dalai Lama
 China opposes U.S. gold medal award to Dalai Lama
 On the 14th Dalai Lama's betrayal of Buddhism

>> Print this article

 
Features

President Hu on national development

The 85th birthday of the Communist Party of China

16th CPC National Congress, 2002

CPC's resolute fight against corruption

Key Points of Hu Jintao's Report
·Hu Jintao charts roadmap for China: sustainable growth, greater democracy
·Hu Jintao mentions "democracy" more than 60 times in landmark report
·Hu Jintao: No tolerance to corruption
·Hu against arbitrary decision-making in the Party
·Hu Jintao calls for building harmonious world
·Hu: China to modernize army for self-defense, world peace
·Hu Jintao appeals for "peace agreement" with Taiwan
·Hu Jintao calls for enhancing "soft power" of Chinese culture
·Hu Jintao vows to "reverse growing income disparity"
·Hu Jintao vows to expand people's democracy
·Hu Jintao advocates "conservation culture" for first time in keynote political document
·Hu promises to promote more non-Communists to leading positions
·Innovation tops Hu Jintao's economic agenda
·Hu Jintao proposes Scientific Outlook on Development for tackling China's immediate woes, challenges
·Hu sets goal of quadrupling per capita GDP under environment, resource restrictions
·Hu: Scientific Outlook on Development part of theories of socialism with Chinese characteristics
·Hu highlights efforts by predecessors, vowing to carry on reform, opening up
·Hu says China experiences "extraordinary" five years of achievements, difficulties
·Hu Jintao stresses socialism with Chinese characteristics



Copyright © 1997-2007 by www.people.com.cn. all rights reserved