BEIJING, October 12 (AP) - China on Friday accused the Dalai Lama of
causing an attack on its embassy in India, a day after criticizing the
U.S. Congress over plans to award its highest civilian honor to the
exiled Tibetan Buddhist leader.
About 30 Tibetan exiles stormed the embassy in New Delhi on Wednesday,
with several chaining themselves to a flag pole while others sprayed
"Free Tibet" in red paint on the embassy walls and main gate, witnesses
said.
They were protesting a recent Chinese order that Beijing must approve
all of Tibet's spiritual leaders, known as Lamas. For centuries, the
search for the reincarnation of lamas _ including Tibet's spiritual head,
the Dalai Lama _ has been carried out by select Tibetan monks.
"The Dalai Lama clique will seek every opportunity available to stir up
trouble and disturb and destroy the stability and development of
China's Tibetan Autonomous Region," the Foreign Ministry said in a
statement.
"These plots are doomed to fail," it said. "We demand the Indian side
abide by its commitments to not allow 'Tibetan separatists' to carry out
anti-Chinese political activities ... and seriously punish the
perpetrators."
The Tibetan leader has been based in India since fleeing his Himalayan
homeland in 1959 amid a failed uprising against Chinese rule.
He remains immensely popular among Tibetans, despite persistent efforts
to demonize him by Beijing, which objects vigorously to all overseas
visits by the Dalai Lama.
Recently, China appears to have increased its verbal attacks on the
Dalai Lama and anyone it sees as supporting him.
On Thursday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said Beijing
protested to Washington over Congress' move, but gave no details. Congress
was to award the prize next week.
"China resolutely opposes the U.S. Congress awarding the Dalai its
so-called Congressional Gold Medal, and firmly opposes any country or any
person using the Dalai issue to interfere in China's internal affairs,"
Liu said.
The White House confirmed President George W. Bush would attend the
ceremony at the Capitol.
The U.S. House of Representatives voted last month to bestow the award
on the Dalai Lama, winner of the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, citing his
"many enduring and outstanding contributions to peace, nonviolence, human
rights, and religious understanding".
Foreign leaders have grown increasingly willing to risk Beijing's wrath
to underscore concerns for human rights in Tibet, which China has
ruled with a heavy hand since communist forces invaded in 1951.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel met the Dalai Lama last month, also
drawing criticism from Beijing. China says Tibet has been its territory
for centuries, but many Tibetans say they were effectively independent
for most of that period. The demonstrators in New Delhi were protesting
the new order, which came into force in September and states that all
future incarnations of living Buddhas related to Tibetan Buddhism must
get Chinese government approval.
China's officially atheistic communist government has increasingly
sought to direct Tibetan Buddhism, for centuries the basis of Tibet's
civil, religious, cultural and political life.
Reincarnated lamas often lead religious communities and oversee the
training of monks, giving them enormous influence over religious life in
Tibet.