"We have to seize the opportunity of the Olympics," said Rigzin. "We have to shift the spotlight while the whole world is watching to show the true color of China."The Youth Congress and other exile groups began a Dharmsala-to-Tibet walk on March 10 — just before Beijing was to kick off its Olympic celebrations with a torch run through Tibet. It was also the anniversary of a failed 1959 uprising in Tibet that forced the Dalai Lama to flee to India.When Indian authorities stopped the first march just days after it began, the exiles embarked on a second attempt.
It's a far more antagonistic approach than the Dalai Lama prefers. On Tuesday, he urged the marchers to abandon the project, saying it would only spark confrontation with Chinese troops at the border. "Will you get independence? What's the use?" he asked.Yet even the Dalai Lama understands the anger of the young."In recent years our approach has had no concrete improvement inside Tibet, so naturally (there are) more and more signs of restlessness, even inside Tibet," he said.The turmoil in Tibet also has laid bare the inability of Tibetans to capitalize on the intense exposure to their cause and extract concessions from China."We are helpless," said Samdhong Rinpoche, prime minister of the Tibetan exile government, echoing comments by the Dalai Lama.The government announced Monday that it was setting up a committee to coordinate the actions of Tibetan groups during the crisis. But word has not reached every group."So far we have not heard from them," said B. Tsering, head of the Tibetan Women's Association, which is taking part in the march to Tibet.Despite China's charge that the Dalai Lama and his supporters planned the uprising, the protests in Tibet and cities around the world were spontaneous — organized by local Tibetan groups and their sympathizers, B. Tsering said.
"If this continues I'm afraid the Tibetan people might lose control. It could get difficult," she said. "Lots of demonstrations are decided on by the young people and we can't control them.
The Dalai Lama insists pacifism is the only path to saving Tibet from the "cultural genocide" that he sees being inflicted by Han Chinese migration to Tibet and the communist regime's religious restrictions."Our only strengths are justice and truth," he said. "Force is immediate, but the effects of truth sometimes take longer."
Protests to continue
PM of the Tibet’s government-in-exile Samdong Rinpoche told The Tribune “If they (people in Tibet) resort to violence, the Dalai Lama may not be able to lead their movement effectively”. Rinpoche said peaceful protests against the use of force against in Tibet would continue across the globe to exert pressure on the international community to persuade China to enter a dialogue for a permanent solution to the Tibetan issue. Claiming that Tibet was never a part of China before the aggression of 1959, he said there was need for reverting to the position as prevailed there before the Chinese aggression. “We are prepared for a dialogue at anytime and at any place with China”, he said.
McLeodganj,To express solidarity with protesters in Tibet, thousands of Tibetans accompanied by hundreds of foreign supporters held a candlelight march this evening.Earlier, a group of the refugee community also held a protest rally raising slogans against China tying Chinese flags on their feet. Women and children also participated in the protest. However, no untoward incidence was reported from any part of the district, said Kangra SP Atul Phulzele.Reports against some nationals of Norway, Israel and western European nations, who were found participating in protests against China, would be sent to their respective embassies so that their past record could come under perusal before granting them visa next time, he said.He, however, made it clear that there was no intention of the Indian authorities to deport them back to their countries, as they were in no way involved in any activity against India.Meanwhile, extra security forces have been deployed at McLeodganj and Dharamsala to keep law and order situation under control.
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