Post by Teddy Bear on Aug 4, 2007 21:19:55 GMT
Two headlines:
Tibetans 'held after China rally'
and
China demands veto on Tibet's 'living buddhas'
Which one conveys the real import of what is at the heart of the issue?
Guess which one belongs to the BBC.
Since the BBC is anxious to preserve its ties with China being the only western media organisation allowed to broadcast there.
But for what purpose?
To twist stories so as not to show the totalitarianism of the Chinese government, who now wish to elect the next Dalai Lama. They make a mockery of Bhuddism, and from the BBC article you'd never know it.
If the BBC is really serving the UK foreign office in its Chinese propaganda then the direction of UK politics is gloomy indeed.
After you read the BBC article, I suggest reading the one in the Telegraph linked to above to understand what is really happening here. As soon as I read that I hunted for the BBC equivalent knowing there would be a radical difference - I see I wasn't wrong.
Tibetans 'held after China rally'
and
China demands veto on Tibet's 'living buddhas'
Which one conveys the real import of what is at the heart of the issue?
Guess which one belongs to the BBC.
Since the BBC is anxious to preserve its ties with China being the only western media organisation allowed to broadcast there.
But for what purpose?
To twist stories so as not to show the totalitarianism of the Chinese government, who now wish to elect the next Dalai Lama. They make a mockery of Bhuddism, and from the BBC article you'd never know it.
If the BBC is really serving the UK foreign office in its Chinese propaganda then the direction of UK politics is gloomy indeed.
After you read the BBC article, I suggest reading the one in the Telegraph linked to above to understand what is really happening here. As soon as I read that I hunted for the BBC equivalent knowing there would be a radical difference - I see I wasn't wrong.
A group of Tibetans were arrested in western China after public calls for the return of Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, reports say.
The incident took place on 1 August at a festival in Litang town in western Sichuan, Radio Free Asia and the International Campaign for Tibet said.
Local resident Runggye Adak was arrested after asking festival-goers if they wanted the Dalai Lama back.
People protesting at his arrest were also detained, the reports said.
The crowd had gathered in what is a traditionally Tibetan area to attend horse races.
A witness told Radio Free Asia that Runggye Adak snatched a microphone from a Chinese official.
He called for the Dalai Lama to return and for the Chinese authorities to free the Panchen Lama, the second holiest figure in Tibetan Buddhism, who has been detained by the Chinese authorities since 1995, when he was six years old.
The crowd backed his call, the witness said, before a Chinese official took the microphone away from him.
Another witness told Radio Free Asia that 20 people were detained initially and another 200 following a protest at the jail. The International Campaign for Tibet reported an unspecified number of detentions.
A police official contacted by the Associated Press news agency confirmed that a protest had taken place, but said that everything was "back to normal".
'No outside influence'
Reports of the protest came as China moved to tighten its control over Tibet's religious clergy.
From 1 September, all reincarnations of "Living Buddhas" would need government approval, Xinhua news agency said, citing the State Administration for Religious Affairs.
"Living Buddhas" - the most senior example of which is the Dalai Lama - lead Tibet's religious communities and can have great influence.
Their selection should "preserve national unity and solidarity of all ethnic groups", rules posted on the administration's website said.
"The process cannot be influenced by any group or individual from outside the country," they said.
Beijing already claims the right to appoint the next Dalai Lama and has named its own replacement Panchen Lama.
China seized control of Tibet in 1951. The Dalai Lama fled to India in 1959, establishing a government-in-exile in Dharamsala.
He remains a very popular figure for Tibetans, but China says he is a "splittist" who seeks to separate Tibet from China.
The incident took place on 1 August at a festival in Litang town in western Sichuan, Radio Free Asia and the International Campaign for Tibet said.
Local resident Runggye Adak was arrested after asking festival-goers if they wanted the Dalai Lama back.
People protesting at his arrest were also detained, the reports said.
The crowd had gathered in what is a traditionally Tibetan area to attend horse races.
A witness told Radio Free Asia that Runggye Adak snatched a microphone from a Chinese official.
He called for the Dalai Lama to return and for the Chinese authorities to free the Panchen Lama, the second holiest figure in Tibetan Buddhism, who has been detained by the Chinese authorities since 1995, when he was six years old.
The crowd backed his call, the witness said, before a Chinese official took the microphone away from him.
Another witness told Radio Free Asia that 20 people were detained initially and another 200 following a protest at the jail. The International Campaign for Tibet reported an unspecified number of detentions.
A police official contacted by the Associated Press news agency confirmed that a protest had taken place, but said that everything was "back to normal".
'No outside influence'
Reports of the protest came as China moved to tighten its control over Tibet's religious clergy.
From 1 September, all reincarnations of "Living Buddhas" would need government approval, Xinhua news agency said, citing the State Administration for Religious Affairs.
"Living Buddhas" - the most senior example of which is the Dalai Lama - lead Tibet's religious communities and can have great influence.
Their selection should "preserve national unity and solidarity of all ethnic groups", rules posted on the administration's website said.
"The process cannot be influenced by any group or individual from outside the country," they said.
Beijing already claims the right to appoint the next Dalai Lama and has named its own replacement Panchen Lama.
China seized control of Tibet in 1951. The Dalai Lama fled to India in 1959, establishing a government-in-exile in Dharamsala.
He remains a very popular figure for Tibetans, but China says he is a "splittist" who seeks to separate Tibet from China.