Tuesday, March 24, 2009

S. Africa's discrimination against the Dalai Lama ... to please communist China?

Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan leader, greets a crowd in Dharmsala, India, on March 8. South Africa is barring him from a peace conference in Johannesburg, saying it did not want to endanger the government's relationship with China. (Ashwini Bhatia / AP)

S. Africa bars Dalai Lama from peace forum

Nobel Prize winners Desmond Tutu, F.W. de Klerk boycott in retaliation

Mon., March. 23, 2009
AP

JOHANNESBURG - South Africa barred the Dalai Lama from a peace conference in Johannesburg this week, hoping to keep good relations with trading partner China but instead generating a storm of criticism.

Friday's peace conference was organized by South African soccer officials to highlight the first World Cup to be held in Africa, which South Africa will host in 2010.

But because the Dalai Lama isn't being allowed to attend, it is now being boycotted by fellow Nobel Peace Prize winners retired Cape Town Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former President F.W. de Klerk as well as members of the Nobel Committee.

"It is disappointing that South Africa, which has received so much solidarity from the world, doesn't want to give that solidarity to others," Nobel Institute Director Geir Lundestad told The Associated Press in Oslo, referring to the decades-long fight against apartheid.

An eclectic mix of Nobel laureates, Hollywood celebrities and other dignitaries are coming to discuss issues ranging from combating racism to how sports can unite people and nations.

But Thabo Masebe, spokesman for President Kgalema Motlanthe, said a high-profile visit by the Tibetan spiritual leader would have distracted from the conference's focus.

"South Africa would have been the source of negative publicity about China," he said Monday. "We do value our relationship with China."

China's largest trading partner in Africa

South Africa is China's largest trading partner on a continent in which China is heavily and increasingly involved.

Tamu Matose, a spokeswoman for Tutu, told the AP that Tutu would not attend "because of the Dalai Lama issue." Tutu was quoted Sunday as calling the barring "disgraceful."

"(South Africa) should admit anyone with a legitimate and peaceful interest and should not take political decisions on who should, and who should not, attend," de Klerk said Monday, announcing he also would skip the conference.

The Norwegian government said it "regrets" the South African decision, and was considering whether to withdraw.

However, the South African Communist Party backed the move, saying March was a particularly sensitive time for a visit.

Last week marked the one-year anniversary of anti-government riots in Lhasa, Tibet's regional capital, and 50 years since the Dalai Lama escaped into exile in India after Chinese troops crushed a Tibetan uprising.

China claims Tibet as part of its territory, but many Tibetans say Chinese rule deprives them of religious freedom and autonomy. Beijing accuses the Dalai Lama of pushing for Tibetan independence and fomenting anti-Chinese protests.

South Africa decided last month to refuse to issue an official invitation, without which, Masebe said, the Dalai Lama cannot visit.

Masebe said the spiritual leader had been welcomed twice previously in South Africa and would be welcome again in the future — but "not now, when the whole world is looking at South Africa."

ANC alliance with Beijing

Beijing, an ally when South Africa's now-governing African National Congress was a liberation movement, and Pretoria have diplomatic ties stretching back a decade and an economic relationship based on trade as well as aid.

China's exports to Africa last year rose 36.3 percent from 2007 to $50.8 billion, while imports of African goods rose 54 percent to $56 billion, according to customs data reported by Xinhua, the Chinese state news agency.

Critics say China's investment in and aid to Africa, ranging from building presidential palaces and sports stadiums to rail and road projects, aims to secure access to the continent's natural resources.

African governments, though, are eager for the funds and counting on continued Chinese investment despite the global economic meltdown.

Samdhong Rinpoche, the prime minister of the Tibetan government-in-exile, said South Africa was under pressure from Beijing and its decision to bar the Dalai Lama was a business matter.

"South Africa is a newly emerging country and China is giving it considerable economic resources so it is understandable," he said Monday in Dharmsala, India. "Every country has to protect its economic and political interests."

Masebe insisted that his government was not bowing to pressure from China.

"We make our own decisions," he said.

Masebe said if conference organizers had talked with officials beforehand, they would have been advised to exclude the Dalai Lama and the controversy could have been avoided.

But Kjetil Siem, chief executive officer of South Africa's Premier Soccer League, said the Dalai Lama was invited in a routine way along with other Nobel laureates.

"When it comes to peace conferences ... it has nothing to do with the government," Siem said.

Siem said the conference was a chance to show what South Africa has accomplished. Soccer was once as segregated as the rest of South African society, with four race-based leagues. Today, the nation is proudly united behind the upcoming World Cup.

The controversy over the Dalai Lama shows the peace conference is "more needed than ever," Siem said.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Though it is not preferrable to others but at least she did that for the good sack of South Africans.

Anonymous said...

What they should try to do is to give him a few more Nobel Prizes. That will certainly make him look better, just like the others.

Anonymous said...

it shows how China influences the world. but unluckily China just comes only to take all natural resource. Like it is doing with Cambodia timber, mine and oil and gas in Cambodia. China never thinks of human right or environment.

Anonymous said...

9;54AM.
What you said is true, but who does not want to be rich?
Cambodia has her own big fat family, has not she?
Cambodia is not going to survive without at least one superpower helps. Those wolves, Vietnam and Thailand will eat up Cambodia just in a second.

Anonymous said...

It's time for Dalai Lama to call it quit. Politic and religion doesn't mix. No one on this planet would want to pray to politician.

Anonymous said...

9:54AM, Dalia lama backed by the west to weaken the Chinese internal affairs. Many African nations today welcoming the arrival of China's present in the region due to fair-trading and the benefits of agriculture know-how by China to tackle the high unemployment and reliance of food supply that being hand out from the west. For centuries, white men explores the African continent, divide, created chaos, and sucked dry of their national resources without any compensations. I am not a fan of the communist China or an adversary of the west, but we shouldn't feel bliss of our ignorance of the past. There is no free lunch. Everything is purely economic.

Anonymous said...

Venerable DaiLa Lama, please don't dream China will not let Tbetan independence from now til next one hundred years times and Chinese Government also did very good to Tibetan peoples, inside Tibet China they are very happy Chinese Government look after them, only you the American dog, please wake up and don't became American dog at all, you should be say thank you to Chinese Government take care Tinetans ok, from Cambodian Victim from 1975 to 1979 during Pol Pot regime under A Yuonese/Vietnamese Hidden Faces Behind The Killing Field Melbourne Australia.

Anonymous said...

Nobody support him anymore ? Then
He will leave buddhism for ever.

Anonymous said...

In the past, Europeans and Japaneses went to explore everywhere and colonized many part of the world. But now, most of humanitarian organizations are from Europe and US. The prosperity in some part of China now are also from the help of US and European countries. I see China is part of the problem rather. We have seen the genocide in Cambodia and in Sudan recently, and China has said nothing but tried to take advantage.

Anonymous said...

Do ma! motherfuckers!