Exiles plan to march into Tibet from India to protest Beijing Olympics
January 08, 2008
By Ashok Sharma
ASSOCIATED PRESS
3:43 a.m. January 4, 2008
NEW DELHI - Hundreds of Tibetan exiles will attempt to march from
India across the border into Tibet to protest China's hosting of this
year's Olympic Games, an exile group said Friday.
The march will be one of a series of protests in India before the
Aug. 8-24 Beijing Games, which the exiles say are being prepared amid
China's continued attempts to subvert Tibetan Buddhist culture and
strengthen Beijing's hold on the Himalayan region.
"The Chinese have said in the past that Tibetans are welcome to
return home, so we are going to test that," said Tsewang Rigzin,
president of the Tibetan Youth Congress, which is organizing the march.
Rigzin said hundreds of members of his organization would depart from
Dharmsala in northern India on March 10 - the day Tibetans
commemorate a failed uprising against the Chinese in 1959.
Dharmsala has been a center for exiles since the Tibetan Buddhist
spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, fled there after the uprising and
set up a government in exile.
Rigsin said the marchers intend to try to cross the border and walk
all the way to the Tibetan capital, Lhasa. He would not give details
on the route of the march, and it remains unclear what sort of
reception the marchers would receive from the Chinese authorities.
The Tibetan Youth Congress, which takes a more radical line in its
protests against China than the Dalai Lama and Tibetan government in
exile, said it had not consulted the Dalai Lama over the protests.
The group called on all Tibetans to use peaceful means to protest the
Games and Chinese plans to have the Olympic torch carried through Tibet.
Beijing insists that Tibet is historically part of China, but many
Tibetans argue that the Himalayan region was more or less independent
for centuries.
Exiles have recently expressed concern about rising numbers of Han
Chinese migrating into Tibet, especially since a railroad route
opened up in 2006.