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Dalai Lama says no use talking if China is not 'serious'
Posted: 27 April 2008 1622 hrs

 
 
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NEW DELHI: The Dalai Lama on Sunday warned talks with China would be pointless unless Beijing was "serious" about finding a solution to the Tibetan issue.

"We have had six rounds of talks but nothing happened and this time if China is serious then it is good, but if it wants to show the world that 'we are talking' then there is no use in meeting," the Dalai Lama's spokesman Tenzin Takla told AFP.

"We have to consider everything," he added.

China's state-run Xinhua news agency announced on Friday that Beijing would meet an envoy of the Tibetan leader for talks in the coming days.

The latest comments came amid reports that Lodhi Gyari, a special envoy of the Tibetan spiritual leader who has headed previous rounds of inconclusive talks with China since 2002, would arrive in India on Wednesday.

Takla confirmed envoy Gyari's planned trip but did not elaborate except to say he would travel to the northern Indian hill town of Dharamshala for "consultations" with the self-exiled Tibetan leadership.

The spokesman of the 72-year-old Nobel laureate also said there was an urgent need to reopen contacts as the Chinese crackdown in the Tibetan region had been stepped up.

"Ongoing repression inside Tibet has been stepped up," Takla said by telephone from Dharamsala, where the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan exiled leaders are based.

"Army troops are surrounding monasteries and arrests are going on," Takla said of the Chinese crackdown which followed deadly anti-Beijing riots that erupted in the regional capital Lhasa on March 10.

"And His Holiness feels to solve the problems we have to meet for talks," the official said.

Analysts said the offer by China, which hosts the August Olympics in Beijing, was a response to the intense global pressure over its crackdown in the remote Himalayan region.

Tibetan sources told AFP that an apex forum of the International Tibetan Support Network – a policy-making global body for the refugees – was currently meeting in Dharamsala to review events.

"The 32 members of the apex group are taking stock of the situation and also discussing the Chinese offer of talks with representatives of his holiness the Dalai Lama," a source from the Tibetan administration said.

The Dalai Lama, who returned from the United States on Saturday, is now scheduled to leave on a two-week trip to Britain and Germany on May 14, Takla said, without giving details of the itinerary.

India gave the Dalai Lama and his supporters sanctuary after the Tibetan leader disguised as a Chinese soldier fled his homeland in 1959, following an abortive anti-Beijing uprising in the region.


- AFP/so

 

 



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