U.S. award opportunity for China: Dalai Lama envoy

Fri Oct 12, 2007 7:54pm EDT
 
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By Paul Eckert, Asia Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - China should view the Dalai Lama's high-profile visit to Washington next week as a chance to listen to the exiled Buddhist spiritual leader who Beijing shuns as a Tibetan separatist, his envoy said on Friday.

Despite fierce Chinese lobbying, the Dalai Lama will receive the U.S. Congressional Gold Medal, the highest civilian honor Congress can bestow, on Wednesday after being hosted at the White House by President George W. Bush the day before.

The award ceremony at the U.S. Capitol will be the first time Bush will have appeared in public with the Dalai Lama, who has visited the White House only for private meetings.

"It is our hope that more than ever before, the leadership in Beijing will have an unfiltered, undiluted opportunity to hear the message of His Holiness," said Lodi Gyari, special envoy of the Dalai Lama.

China views the Dalai Lama, who fled his homeland in 1959 after a failed uprising against Chinese Communist rule, as a separatist. Beijing bitterly denounced Congress' decision to award the medal and Chinese state media have ratcheted up attacks on the Dalai Lama in recent weeks.

Gyari, who has represented the Dalai Lama in six rounds of talks with Chinese authorities, said he only seeks greater autonomy in religion, culture and language policy in the Buddhist Himalayan region.

The Dalai Lama hoped his Washington visit would let him "reach out to the leadership in China" at a time of renewed repression of religion in Tibet that resembled the harsh 1950s, when communist rule was imposed on the region, Gyari said.

After failing to stop the congressional medal, China had pressed U.S. authorities to shift the date of the ceremony so it would not coincide with a key Chinese Communist Party Congress next week that was announced months after the Washington date.  Continued...

 

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