China vows not to compromise with Tibetan in exiles
Updated on
Friday, November 21, 2008, 00:00
IST

Beijing, Nov 21: China launched a new attack on the
Dalai Lama's drive for Tibetan autonomy on Friday, vowing not to
comprise with leaders of the Tibetan exile community meeting
to debate the future of their movement.
An editorial in the official Tibet Daily newspaper
denounced the Nobel peace laureate's "middle way" proposal
that the region be granted control over its internal affairs
while remaining a part of China.
It said that approach was tantamount to seeking outright
independence for the region, which China insists has been part
of its territory for 700 years. Many Tibetans say they were
effectively independent for most of that time before Chinese
forces invaded shortly after the 1949 communist revolution.
The Dalai Lama's "so-called 'middle way' is a naked
expression of 'Tibet independence' aimed at nakedly spreading
the despicable plot of opposing the tide of history," the
statement said.
The editorial appeared aimed at sending a clear message
to exile Tibetans meeting this week that China will not yield
in its hard-line approach.
The gathering in the Indian hill town of Dharmsala, the
base of the self-declared government-in-exile, has exposed
rifts between many young Tibetans who advocate a declaration
of independence from China and the older guard, who stand by
the Dalai Lama's path of compromise.
The divide was sharpened by a March uprising of Tibetans
across western China that marked the biggest challenge to
Chinese rule in Tibet in nearly two decades.
Last month's talks between China and representatives of
the Dalai Lama produced no progress and in their wake, China
has ratcheted up its rhetoric against the Dalai Lama and his
proposals.
Bureau Report