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Beijing warns Tibetan separatists
by Staff Writers
Beijing (UPI) Mar 2, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Top Chinese leaders, ahead of the annual National People's Congress, have stressed the need for social progress in Tibet but warned separatist groups off protesting.

The ruling Communist Party should "should consider both internal and external situations" and follow the path of "making progress while maintaining stability," Jia Qinglin, a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, said.

Jia urged officials in Tibet and Tibetan-inhabited areas of the neighboring provinces of Sichuan, Yunnan, Gansu and Qinghai to maintain steady growth, a report by government run news agency Xinhua said.

Efforts should be made to improve the livelihoods of local farmers and herders, including better access to public services, housing, education, healthcare, employment and social security.

Jia made the remarks while presiding over a meeting to promote development and stability in the areas.

Next week China's National People's Congress will meet in Beijing, ahead of the anniversary of the March 2008 riots in the Tibetan capital Lhasa.

The Communist Party, national police and local police authorities and the military will be alert to protests and street demonstrations in Tibet and surrounding provinces.

Jia warned against what Beijing sees as encouragement of separatist groups by the self-exiled Dalai Lama spiritual Buddhist leader.

"The clique of the Dalai Lama (is) trying in vain to continuously create incidents in Tibet and the Tibetan-inhabited areas in the four provinces," Jia said.

Beijing consistently has fought against what it says is the Dalai Lama's interference in Tibetan affairs since he fled soon after the Chinese army marched into Tibet in the late 1950s.

In particular, Beijing says the Dalai Lama urges terrorist acts against Chinese people and institutions in Tibet, as well as encourages acts of self-immolation, an increasingly used form of protest.

Even though the Dalai Lama always has rejected Beijing's accusations, senior Chinese officials including Jia go out of their way to warn Tibetans against supporting the Dalai Lama.

"(Authorities) should implement the prescribed measures well to resolutely crush the Dalai Lama clique's conspiracy of making Tibetan-inhabited areas unstable, thus making the masses able to live and work there comfortably," Jia said.

He said local officials and Communist Party cadres should visit local people to better understand their needs so they support the government.

Officials also should cultivate relationships with "with religious figures who love the country," he said.

Many Tibetans resent what they see as a ploy by Beijing to move ethnic Han Chinese into the majority Tibetan areas, making Tibetans a minority in their own lands.

Jia's comments were backed up by tougher warnings from Tibet's Communist Party Secretary Chen Quanguo.

He urged officials in Tibet to maintain monitor mobile phone and the Internet use and all leave is canceled for the time being, a report by the BBC said.

Officials should work "to crush plots aiming to sabotage stability in Tibet and threaten security of the state by hostile forces and the Dalai Lama group," Chen is quoted as writing in the official government Tibetan Daily newspaper.

"Mobile phones, the Internet and other measures for the management of new media need to be fully implemented to maintain the public's interests and national security," Chen said.

Chinese authorities have been worried about acts of self-immolations in Tibetan areas, mainly by monks and nuns -- some filmed by people using mobile phones and then posting the videos on the Internet.

Chen said monastery management officials should intensify their political work. They must guide Tibetan Buddhist monks and nuns "to be patriotic, love their religion and respect law and order," his Tibet Daily article said.

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China accuses Dalai Lama of plotting Tibet 'turmoil'
Beijing (AFP) March 2, 2012 - China's top political advisor has accused followers of the Dalai Lama of plotting to create "turmoil" in the country's Tibetan-inhabited areas as the anniversary of deadly 2008 riots approaches.

Jia Qinglin, who is ranked number four in the Communist Party leadership, made the comments at a meeting Thursday attended by the police minister and officials from Tibet and four Tibetan-inhabited provinces.

His comments came as leading Tibetan poet Woeser -- who like many Tibetans only goes by one name -- said she had been placed under a form of house arrest in Beijing and prevented from accepting an award.

"Currently the Dalai clique is plotting to create disturbances in Tibet and in Tibetan-inhabited areas in four provinces," said Jiang, referring to followers of the Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.

"Party and governments at all levels must side with the masses and implement all working measures to resolutely smash the plots of the Dalai clique to bring turmoil to Tibetan-inhabited areas."

Beijing has blamed the Dalai Lama, who fled to India in March 1959, for recent unrest in Tibet and nearby areas, including a series of self-immolations by Buddhist monks and nuns.

Jia, who heads the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, a type of lower parliament, also ordered officials to increase their presence in Tibetan Buddhist monasteries, according to the comments posted on the central government's website.

The government closely monitors the activities of Tibetan Buddhist clergy, stationing its representatives in monasteries and nunneries in the region.

Authorities are particularly keen to avoid any unrest ahead of a 10-day annual meeting of China's parliament that starts on Monday. It will coincide with the sensitive anniversaries of the Dalai Lama's flight into exile and of the 2008 riots.

China's top leader in Tibet has ordered increased controls over the Internet and mobile phones during the period, according to state media reports.

Tibetans have long chafed at China's rule over the vast Tibetan plateau, accusing Beijing of curbing religious freedoms and eroding their culture and language.

Beijing insists that Tibetans enjoy religious freedom and have benefited from improved living standards brought on by China's economic expansion.

Woeser said Friday on her blog that she had been prevented from attending a ceremony at the Netherlands embassy in Beijing to accept the 2011 Prince Claus Award, a prominent Dutch cultural prize.

Police "informed us -- including my husband Wang Lixiong -- that for the coming period of time our freedom will be restricted", she posted.

"If we want to leave home we have to get their agreement, if they agree we can leave, they will still follow us."



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SINO DAILY
China steps up Internet controls in Tibet
Beijing (AFP) March 1, 2012
China's top leader in Tibet has ordered increased controls over the Internet and mobile phones, state press said Thursday, ahead of upcoming sensitive anniversaries in the restive region. Chen Quanguo, Communist Party head of Tibet, said maintaining stability in the Himalayan region was of utmost importance during the meeting of China's National People's Congress which opens its annual sessi ... read more


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