Tibetan sovereignty debate
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tibet was once an independent kingdom, which later became a part of China. The government of the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Government of Tibet in Exile, however, disagree over the definition of Tibet, when Tibet became a part of China, and whether this incorporation into China is legitimate according to international law.
Contents |
[edit] The view of the Chinese Governments
The government of the PRC contends that China has had control over Tibet since the Yuan Dynasty (1271 – 1368).[1]
The government of Republic of China (ROC), which ruled mainland China from 1912 until 1949 and now controls Taiwan, has had cabinet level Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission in charge of administration of Tibet and Mongolia regions since 1912. The Commission retained its cabinet level status after 1949, but no longer executes that function. On 10 May 1943, Chiang Kai-shek asserted that "Tibet is part of Chinese territory... No foreign nation is allowed to interfere in our domestic affairs".[2] He again declared in 1946 that the Tibetans were Chinese.[3] ROC still claims sovereignty over Tibet and Mongolia in its constitution.
In the late 19th century, China adopted the Western model of nation-state diplomacy and concluded a series of treaties regarding Tibet's boundaries and status.[4] Chinese government sources consider this a sign of sovereignty rather than suzerainty.
[edit] Historical Facts From Non-Chinese Sources
The 1912 edition of the Catholic Encyclopedia states that
| “ | During the eighteenth century the Chinese Emperor, K'ien-lung [i.e.Qianlong], began to establish his supremacy over Tibet; already in 1725 two high Chinese commissioners had been appointed to control the temporal affairs of the country, and in 1793 an imperial edict ordered that future Dalai Lamas were to be chosen from the names of children drawn from a "golden urn". | ” |
| “ | The secular administration of Tibet includes a council (ka hia) of four ministers (kalon or kablon) of the third rank of Chinese officials, elected as a rule by the Peking government, on presentation by the Chinese amban...there are six military commanders (taipêng), with the fourth degree of Chinese rank. | ” |
| “ | The Chinese administration of Tibet includes an imperial resident (chu tsang ta ch'ên) or amban (ngang pai) with an assistant resident (pang pan ta ch'ên)...The imperial resident is Chao Ehr-fung (appointed March, 1908)[4] | ” |
The same Catholic Encyclopedia under the subheading "Relations with China, Russia, and England" surveys a list of treaties China signed on matters regarding Tibet.
The September 1903 issue of National Geographic described it thus:
| “ | Since the fifteenth century all power, civil and spiritual, has been nominally in the hands of the Dalai Lama, but China maintains a Manchu resident and an army. Until the Dalai Lama’s 22 year, the government is in the hands of a regent appointed by the Emperor of China. In order to avoid strife in selecting a Dalai Lama, the electoral council places three strips of paper with the names of three boys in an urn, and the Manchu resident removes one with a small staff. The dalai lama’s council, in whose hands is the actual power, embraces four so-called “Galons” appointed by the Emperor of China. The administration is in the hands of a closed aristocracy, and bribery and corruption are nearly universal.[5] | ” |
The 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica traces Chinese dominion over Tibet to Mongol-ruled China i.e. the Yuan Dynasty, continuing to the Ming Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty:
| “ | Kublai Khan conquered all the east of Tibet...Kublai invested Phagspa with sovereign power over (1) Tibet proper, comprising the thirteen districts of U and Tsang, (2) Khalil and (3) Amdo. From this time the Sakya-pa lamas became the universal rulers of Tibet...[Later, Chyang Chub Gyaltshan] subdued Tibet proper and Kham… and with the approval of the court of Peking established a dynasty...When the Mongol dynasty of China passed away, the Mings confirmed and enlarged the dominion of the Tibetan rulers, recognizing at the same time the chief lamas of the eight principal monasteries of the country…During the minority of the fifth (really the third) Dalai Lama, when the Mongol king Tengir To… intervened in the affairs of the country, the Pan-ch'en Lo-sang Ch'o-kyi Gyal-ts'ang lama ... then applied for help to the first [Qing Dynasty] Manchu emperor of China, who had just ascended the throne...The Chinese government in 1653 confirmed the Dalai Lama in his authority, and he paid a visit to the emperor at Peking. The Mongol Khoshotes in 1706 and the Sungars in 1717 interfered again in the succession of the Dalai lama, but the Chinese army finally conquered the country in 1720, and the present system of government was established...[6] | ” |
The Qing Dynasty Chinese rule over the Tibet was uninterrupted in the next centuries:
| “ | In 1872-1873 some attempt was made by Indian officials to open up trade with Tibet…in 1886 a mission was organized to proceed to Lhasa. The Chinese… granted a passport to this mission...In 1890 a treaty was concluded, and trade regulations under this treaty in 1893; but the negotiations were carried on with the Chinese authorities...
[In 1908] The Dalai Lama was now summoned to Peking, where he obtained the imperial authority to resume his administration…the Chinese amban in Lhasa …summoned the Chinese troops to enter the city. They did so, and the Dalai Lama fled to India in February 1910…and he was deposed by imperial decree.[6] |
” |
According to historian Zahiruddin Ahmad, since at least the 18th century, when the Qing Government was setting up its local government structure and promulgated laws for the governing, Beijing has, in the words of a foreign missionary who witnessed, had "absolute dominion over Tibet"[7].
The Chinese Resident Ministers in Tibet, namely Ambans, were bestowed power which, according to the Imperial Ordinance promulgated in 1793, was on a par with the local spiritual leaders of Dalai Lamas and Panchen Lamas[8]. According to the Ordinance, the Ambans were in absolute charge of financial, diplomatic, and trade matters.
According to an article by the Tibetologist Melvyn C. Goldstein: [9]
| “ | The 1906 Anglo-Chinese Convention reaffirmed the Chinese overlord position in Tibet. In 1907, an Anglo-Russian treaty internationalized this treaty. | ” |
| “ | The [British] invasion of Tibet and the Lhasa Convention of 1904 dramatically altered Chinese policy toward Tibet. Until then, the Qing Dynasty had evinced no interest in directly administering or Sinicizing Tibet...Beijing got the British troops to leave Tibetan...Britain's casual invasion of Tibet, therefore, stimulated China to protect what it felt were its national interests in Tibet by beginning a program to integrate Tibet culturally, economically, and politically more closely with the rest of China. | ” |
| “ | [The Dalai Lama] had been "deposed" by the Chinese Government in 1904...In 1908, he went to Beijing to visit the Emperor and Court. Arguing that the amban did not faithfully transmit his views to Beijing, the Dalai Lama requested permission to petition the throne directly (i.e., to bypass the amban)...[In 1910] China again deposed the Dalai Lama and expanded its efforts to expand its real control in Tibet... | ” |
The "Patron-Priest" relationship (Tibetan: chöyön; Wylie: mchod-yon) held between the Chinese central authorities and the Tibetan local governments was one of superior to inferior. The 13th Dalai Lama, for example, knelt before the Empress Dowager and the young Emperor while he delivered his petition in Beijing. He was awarded the humiliating title of "Loyally Submissive Vice-Regent", and ordered to follow China's commands and communicate with the Emperor only through the Chinese Amban in Lhasa.[10][11]The kneeling before the Emperor followed the 17th-century precedent in the case of the 6th Dalai Lama.[12]
[edit] Legal arguments based on historical status
The position of the PRC, which has ruled mainland China since 1949, as well as the official position of the Republic of China, which ruled mainland China before 1949 and currently controls Taiwan [13], is that Tibet has been an indivisible part of China de jure since the Yuan Dynasty of Mongol-ruled China in the 13th century. [14], comparable to other states such as the Kingdom of Dali and the Tangut Empire that were also incorporated into the Middle Kingdom at the time. The PRC contends that according to the Succession of states theory in international law all subsequent Chinese governments (Ming Dynasty, Qing Dynasty, ROC and PRC) have succeeded the Yuan Dynasty in exercising de jure sovereignty and de facto power over Tibet.
[edit] Unique ethnicity
According to the current government, successive Chinese governments have recognized Tibet as having its own unique culture and language; however, they believe that this situation, does not necessarily argue in favor of independence, because China has over 56 unique ethnic groups and is one of many multi-national states in the world.
[edit] De facto independence
The ROC government had no effective control over Tibet from 1912 to 1951; however, in the opinion of the Chinese government, this condition does not represent Tibet's complete independence as many other parts of China also enjoyed de facto independence when the Chinese nation was torn by warlordism, Japanese invasion, and civil war.[15] Goldstein explains what is meant by de facto independence in the following statement:
| “ | ...[Britain] instead adopted a policy based on the idea of autonomy for Tibet within the context of Chinese suzerainty, that is to say, de facto independence for Tibet in the context of token subordination to China. Britain articulated this policy in the Simla Convention of 1914.[16] | ” |
While at times the Tibetans were fiercely independent-minded, at other times, Tibet indicated its willingness to accept subordinate status as part of China provided that Tibetan internal systems were left untouched and China relinquished control over a number of important ethnic Tibetan groups in Kham and Amdo [17][18]. China insists that during this period the ROC government continued to maintain sovereignty over Tibet. The Provisional Constitution of the Republic of China (1912) stipulated that Tibet was a province of the Republic of China. Provisions concerning Tibet in the Constitution of the Republic of China promulgated later all stress the inseparability of Tibet from Chinese territory, and the Central Government of China exercise of sovereignty in Tibet. [19][20][21][22] In 1927, the Commission in Charge of Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs[23] of the the Chinese Government contained members of great influence in the Mongolian and Tibetan areas, such as the 9th Panchen Lama, the 13th Dalai Lama and other Tibetan government representatives.[19] In 1934, on his condolence mission for the demise of the Dalai Lama, the Chinese General Huang Musong posted notices in Chinese and Tibetan throughout Lhasa that alluded to Tibet as an integral part of China while expressing the utmost reverence for the Dalai Lama and religion.[24]
The 13th Dalai Lama's attitude towards the Central Government vacillated but had been gradually improving. He began to see the possibility of unceasing wars between Tibet and contiguous provinces (Qinghai, Sichuan and Yunnan) under the control of various warlords, and Tibet would benefit if there was effective intervention by the Central Government. These territorial disputes became for him local disputes instead of China-Tibet disputes. When wars of warlords were about to come to end, a unified Central Government would also be detrimental to the Dalai Lama - if the Panchen Lama were to oppose him with Chinese support. So in 1931, he sent delegates to attend the National Assembly. After his death, the Tibetan Kashag Government continued the policy of sending delegates to the National Assembly of 1936. [25][26][27]Also, delegates from Tibetan areas attended the Drafting Committee for a new constitution of the Republic of China in 1925, the fourth National Congress of the Kuomintang in 1931, and a National Assembly for drafting a new Chinese constitution in 1946. A "Trade Mission" sent by the Tibetan government attended another National Assembly for drafting a new Chinese constitution in 1948.[22][28]
The 9th Panchen Lama traditionally ruled over one-third of Tibet.[29] On 1 February 1925, the Panchen Lama attended the preparatory session of the "National Reconstruction Meeting" (Shanhou huiyi) meant to identify ways and means of unifying the Chinese nation, and gave a speech about achieving the unification of five nationalities, including Tibetans, Mongolians and Han Chinese. In 1933, he called upon the Mongols to national unity and to obey the Chinese Government to resist Japanese invasion. In February 1935 the Chinese government appointed Panchen Lama "Special Cultural Commissioner for the Western Regions" and assigned him 500 Chinese troops.[30] He spent much of his time teaching and preaching Buddhist doctrines - including the principles of unity and pacification for the border regions - extensively in inland China, outside of Tibet, from 1924 until 1 December 1937, when he died on his way back to Tibet under the protection of Chinese troops.[31]
The approval of the Kuomintang government was needed to validate the choice of the Dalai Lama and Panchen Lama. When the current 14th Dalai Lama was first installed in Lhasa, it was with an armed escort of Chinese troops and an attending Chinese minister, in accordance with centuries-old tradition.[32] Alastair Lamb comments on contemporary news reports of the installation ceremony,
| “ | the impression conveyed to the world at large, duly reported in the Calcutta Statesman and The Times of London, for example, was that the Chinese were somehow essential to the recognition of the legitimate Dalai Lama. The Calcutta Statesman...declared...that Mr. Wu had conducted the Dalai Lama to his throne, and read out a proclamation, and that the Dalai Lama had made obeisance towards Peking.[33][34][35][19][29] | ” |
According to Yu Shiyu, during China's resistance war against Japanese invasion, Chiang Kai-shek ordered Ma Bufang, Governor of Qinghai (1937–1949), to repair the Yushu airport at Qinghai Province to deter Tibetan independence.[36] In May 1943, Chiang warned that Tibet must accept and follow the instructions and orders of the Central Government, that they must agree and help to build the Chinese-India [war-supply] road, and that they must maintain direct communications with the Office of the Mongolian and Tibetan Affairs Commission in Lhasa and not through the newly established "Foreign Office" of Tibet. He sternly warned that he would "send an air force to bomb Tibet immediately" should Tibet be found to be collaborating with Japan.[37]
Throughout the Kuomintang years, no country gave Tibet diplomatic recognition.[38]
Regarding Tibet’s assertion of its independence status before its "invasion" by People's Liberation Army, Goldstein documents the response of the India Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Nehru, 8 September 1950:
| “ | Nehru responded bluntly: "The Government of India will continue the policy of the British period in considering Tibet outwardly a part of China but internally independent... ["Shakabpa wrote 'internally independent' but Nehru certainly said 'internally autonomous'," according to Goldstein in footnote 86, and the Tibetans' response following]." The Tibetans replied: "Because Tibet is independent please do not talk about 'internal autonomy' under China..." Nehru was a bit irritated by this and reply sharply to the Tibetans that it was not enough to speak about Tibet independence: such status had to be proved according to the law. [And Nehru rejected the Tibetan’s legal reasoning based on alleged "separate treaty" between Britain and Tibet in the Simla Convention of 1904. Nehru then replied to the Tibetans]: "There is no separate treaty like this and China never accepted the Simla Convention. The Chinese believe that Tibet is a part of China. Tibet thinks that because China didn’t accept Simla, it is independent but at that time Tibet did not make any clear decision. That was a mistake. And later when you had the time and the opportunity to do something [about "independence"] you did nothing and this was a mistake. During this period China has been very clever and have proclaimed widely in the internationally community that Tibet is part of China...[39] | ” |
| “ | Nehru advised the [Tibetan Yatung delegation who were about to negotiate with Beijing in April 1951] to admit that Tibet was a part of China, since it was seen as such in the eyes of the world. He also told them they would probably have to agree to Chinese control over Tibet's foreign relations...[40] | ” |
[edit] Foreign interventions
Finally, the PRC considers all pro-independence movements aimed at ending Chinese sovereignty in Tibet, including British attempts to establish control in the late 19th century and early 20th century [41], the CIA's backing of Tibetan insurgents during the 1950s and 1960s, [42][43] and the Government of Tibet in Exile today, [32] as one long campaign abetted by Western imperialism aimed at destroying Chinese territorial integrity and sovereignty, or destabilizing China. [44]
Shen Jirao writes on China Tibet Information Center website:
| “ | From 1913 to 1914, China was forced to send delegates to attend the tripartite conference at Simla...the British attempted to divide the areas inhabited by the Tibetans into "outer Tibet" which was Tibet, and "inner Tibet" which was composed of areas inhabited by the Tibetans in the four provinces neighboring Tibet. China would administer "inner Tibet" for the time being, but refrain from meddling with the affairs of "outer Tibet" which would follow the system of autonomy. The British controlled "outer Tibet" in a short period of time, and those who stood for "Tibetan independence" lauded the British occupation as "Tibetan autonomy" and even a period of "Tibetan independence"...
A British Foreign Office's report titled Tibet and the Issue on China's "Suzerainty", issued in March 1943, proposed depriving China of its suzerainty over Tibet. Fearing that China would resort to force, the British Foreign Office consulted with the Indian Affairs Office and backed out of the plan.[45] |
” |
Tibetologist Melvyn C. Goldstein writes about CIA involvement in Tibet leading up to the uprising against Chinese rule in the 1950s:
| “ | Moreover, by 1956 the U.S. was encouraging the anti-Chinese faction, and in 1957, actually started to train and arm Tibetan guerrillas. Mao... reduced the number of Han cadre and troops in Tibet...the [1959] Tibetan rebellion also failed dismally...The CIA subsequently assisted the guerrillas in establishing a safe-haven base of operations in northern Nepal...[46] | ” |
| “ | A case can be made that U.S. active involvement in the 1950s, particularly from 1956, played a significantly role in destabilizing Tibet and inadvertently fostering the uprising in 1959...[47] | ” |
The New York Times commented on the American policy during the 1960s:
| “ | The decade-long covert program to support the Tibetan independence movement was part of the C.I.A.'s worldwide effort to undermine Communist governments, particularly in the Soviet Union and China.[42] | ” |
The American Tibetologist Tom Grunfeld writes that during The Cold War:
| “ | From exile, the Dalai Lama oversaw refugee resettlement and guerrilla warfare—although he officially renounced all violence. CIA support encouraged insurgent Tibetans to continue their war for independence, but the CIA was more interested in harassing communist China than in promoting Tibetan independence.[48] | ” |
And after the Cold War:
| “ | While officially recognizing Tibet as part of China, the U.S. Congress and White House unofficially encourage the campaign for independence.[48] | ” |
According to Michael Parenti, the US continues its policy of interference in Tibetan affairs today:
| “ | Throughout the 1960s, the Tibetan exile community was secretly pocketing $1.7 million a year from the CIA...Into the twenty-first century, via the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and other conduits that are more respectable sounding than the CIA, the U.S. Congress continued to allocate an annual $2 million to Tibetans in India, with additional millions for “democracy activities” within the Tibetan exile community.[32] | ” |
Much of the NED's fund goes to Tibet independence support groups. This democracy promotion invites suspicion. According to Michael Barker:
| “ | the NEDs first acting president, observed that in fact “A lot of what we [the NED] do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the CIA”...it appears that the NED was envisaged by US foreign policy elites to be a more suitable way to provide strategic funding to nongovernmental organizations than via covert CIA funding...Barker (2006) has illustrated the NED’s anti-democratic involvement in facilitating and manipulating the ‘colour revolutions’ which recently swept across Eastern Europe...the NED’s activities are intimately linked with those of the CIA. This article has demonstrated the close ties that exist between the Dalai Lama’s non-violent campaign for Tibetan independence and U.S. foreign policy elites who are actively supporting Tibetan causes through the NED...the overwhelmingly anti-democratic nature of the NED can only weaken the legitimacy of the claims of any group associated with the NED.[49] | ” |
F. William Engdahl[50] writes:
| “ | Washington has obviously decided on an ultra-high risk geopolitical game with Beijing's by fanning the flames of violence in Tibet just at this sensitive time in their relations and on the run-up to the Beijing Olympics. It's part of an escalating strategy of destabilization of China which has been initiated by the Bush Administration over the past months, and which includes the attempt to ignite an anti-China Saffron Revolution in the neighboring Myanmar region...The background actors in the Tibet actions confirm that Washington has been working overtime in recent months to prepare another of its infamous Color Revolutions...As in the other recent Color Revolutions... the US Government is fanning the flames of destabilization against China by funding opposition protest organizations inside and outside Tibet through its arm, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED)...In short, US State Department and US intelligence community finger prints are all over the upsurge around the Free Tibet movement and the attacks of March...and NED operations embodied a series of 'democratic' or soft coup projects as part of a larger strategy which would strategically cut China off from access to its vital external oil and gas reserves.[51] | ” |
Tom Grunfeld also writes:
| “ | U.S. public diplomacy skirts the independence issue, focusing on criticism of human rights abuses. Yet recent concessions and overtures to the Tibet Lobby are seen as evidence by CCP hard-line factions that Washington’s ultimate goal is to fracture China.[48] | ” |
The German-Foreign-Policy.com writes:
| “ | Berlin is using the upheaval in the western region of the People's Republic of China to pursue its campaign of attrition against Beijing...Supporting extensive autonomy rights for Tibet and even its secession is in line with the traditional German East Asia policy. Already in the 1930s and 1940s, Berlin considered this region to be an important base for expanding its influence toward China. Since the mid 1980s, Germany has been reviving this strategy, and organizations of German "Volksgruppen" (ethnic group) policy are among those actively promoting a "free Tibet". The secessionist policy is also aimed at other vast regions of China (Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang). Fearing its future power, Berlin is seeking to weaken its ascending East Asian rival. Last fall, german-foreign-policy.com published a series of special reports on the history and presence of German Tibet policy. Because of the current events we are providing free access to those analyses over the next few weeks. Click here to find Strategies of Attrition...[52] | ” |
[edit] Human Rights
[edit] Genocide Charges
Some pro-Tibet groups claim the death toll in Tibet since the 1950 People's Liberation Army invasion of Tibet to be 1,200,000 and have filed official charges of genocide against prominent Chinese leaders and officials.[53] This figure has been disputed by Patrick French, a supporter of the Tibetan cause who was able to view the data and calculations:
| “ | Some [pro-Tibet groups] use questionable information. For example, the Free Tibet Campaign in London (of which I am a former director) and other groups have long claimed that 1.2 million Tibetans have been killed by the Chinese since they invaded in 1950. However, after scouring the archives in Dharamsala while researching my book on Tibet, I found that there was no evidence to support that figure.[54][55] | ” |
[edit] Other Rights
PRC argues that the Tibetan authority under successive Dalai Lamas was itself a human rights violator. The old society was a serfdom and, according to foreigners who witnessed it, had slavery. [56]
Michael Parenti describes the human rights condition in old Tibet:
| “ | The majority of the rural population were serfs...the serfs went without schooling or medical care...under a lifetime bond to work...without pay...torture and mutilation--including eye gouging, the pulling out of tongues, hamstringing, and amputation--were favored punishments inflicted upon thieves, and runaway or resistant serfs.[32] | ” |
The Tibetologist Robert Barnett wrote about the violent tendencies of powerful monks against the introduction of anything un-Buddhist that might diminish their hold to power:
| “ | The clergy who destroyed the attempts of the Tibetan government and the previous Dalai Lama to enlarge and modernize the Tibetan army in the 1920s...were not motivated in the slightest by objections to violence, but by the fear that modernization might, by increasing links with the un-Buddhist British, lead to the diminution of the monasteries' power; indeed there were several insurgencies against the previous Dalai Lama or his regents this century led by monks in defense of that belief.[57] | ” |
Regarding the repressive and violent tendencies of the exile Tibetan community,
| “ | Within the exile community itself there is a continuing streak of political intolerance, especially towards those who have made the slightest perceived criticism of the Dalai Lama, who risk beatings or threats of assassination. Neither is religion by any means above conflict: at least two of the four schools of Tibetan Buddhism are at present wracked by disputes; both cases have led to murders or threats of murder.[57] | ” |
Old Tibet also had a long history of persecuting non-Buddhist Christians. In the years 1630 and 1742, Tibetan Christian communities were suppressed by the lamas of the Gelugpa Sect, whose chief lama was the Dalai Lama. Jesuit priests were made prisoners in 1630, or attacked before they reached Tsaparang. Between 1850 and 1880 eleven fathers of the Paris Foreign Mission Society were murdered in Tibet, or killed or injured during their journeys to other missionary outposts in the Sino-Tibetan borderlands. In 1881 Father Brieux was reported to have been murdered on his way to Lhasa. Qing officials later discovered that the murder cases were in fact covertly supported and even orchestrated by local lamaseries and their patrons -- the native chieftains. In 1904, Qing official Feng Quan sought to curtail the influence of the Gelugpa Sect and ordered the protection of Western missionaries and their churches. Indignation over Feng Quan and the Christian presence escalated to a climax in March 1905, when thousands of the Batang lamas revolted, killing Feng, his entourage, local Manchu and Han Chinese officials, and the local French Catholic priests. The revolt soon spread to other cities in eastern Tibet, such as Chamdo, Litang and Nyarong, and at one point almost spilled over into neighboring Sichuan Province. The missionary stations and churches in these areas were burned and destroyed by the angry Gelugpa monks and local chieftains. Dozens of local Westerners, including at least four priests, were killed or fatally wounded. The scale of the rebellion was so tremendous that only when panicked Qing authorities hurriedly sent 2,000 troops from Sichuan to pacify the mobs did the revolt gradually came to an end. The lamasery authorities and local native chieftains' hostility towards the Western missionaries in Tibet lingered through the last throes of the Manchu dynasty and into the Republican period.[58][4][59]
The Dalai Lama himself was accused by a followers of another Tibetan sect for religious intolerance when he banned the worship of Dorje Shugden in 1996.[60]
The three UN resolutions of 1959, 1961, and 1965 condemned human rights violation in Tibet; however, these resolutions were passed at a time when the PRC was not permitted to become a member and of course was not allowed to present its version of events in the region (however, the Republic of China on Taiwan was a member of the UN at the time, and it equally claimed sovereignty over Tibet and opposed Tibetan self-determination). The Tibetologist Grunfeld further notes that:
| “ | These resolutions served no practical purpose. None even mentioned China by name, nor did they question the legitimacy of Chinese rule in Tibet (the 1961 resolution did regret, in passing, the deprivation of the right to self-determination)—worded, as they were, solely to express regrets over the alleged abuse of "human rights" in Tibet. The UN's denunciation of those who did not act "reasonably" and "fairly" flew in the face of its own actions of denying the PRC membership during this period. It is hardly surprising that the Chinese government regarded these resolutions with little more than contempt.[61] | ” |
Grunfeld comments in another article about Human Rights Watch focusing attention on the individuals who are indeed victims of human rights abuses:
| “ | ...since this repression is highly selective and not universal, their reports distort the overall picture of what is going on inside Tibet.[48] | ” |
Grunfeld also notes that (for 15 years in the 1960s and 1970s):
| “ | From exile, the Dalai Lama oversaw refugee resettlement and guerrilla warfare—although he officially renounced all violence.[48] | ” |
The Tibetologist Robert Barnett sums up the "human rights" agenda as perceived by China and the developing world and the United Nations unwillingness to condemn China:
| “ | The unfortunate history of the Tibet issue, used by the Western powers, and by the United States in particular, in the 1950s and 1960s as part of their cold war strategy to destabilize China, has fueled the perception that criticism of Beijing's role in Tibet is a device raised by westerners to attack China in particular and developing countries in general. This has enabled Beijing to rally support from the developing world and led to the collapse of the last nine attempts at the United Nations to criticize China's human rights practices.[62] | ” |
The Chinese government insists that the Tibet question is not about human rights, but about territorial integrity and unity of the State. On 12 April 2008, the Chinese President Hu Jintao told Australia's Prime Minister Mr Kevin Rudd:
| “ | Our conflict with the Dalai clique is not an ethnic problem, not a religious problem, nor a human rights problem. It is a problem either to safeguard national unification or to split the motherland.[63] | ” |
Robert Barnett described:
| “ | The Tibetan activists inside Tibet have rarely (until recently) incorporated the issue of human rights in their protests or slogans—the language of human rights is largely a facet of exile rhetoric and Western simplification of the issue. Inside Tibet, the demands raised in wall posters have focused more on independence: rightly or wrongly, that has been to them the central issue.[64] | ” |
It is about restraining the "splitist" or separatist activities of the Tibet independence forces from within and without China, many of them -- especially leaders of the Tibetan Youth Congress which claims 30,000 over members [65]-- advocating violence.
Robert Barnett wrote about this danger in 1998:
| “ | Today some ten thousand Tibetans are members of India's military forces, soldiers with a special aptitude for high-altitude warfare, posing a threat that China views with some seriousness. Neither is the level of political violence among Tibetans as low as some Western reports would suggest: at least seven bombs exploded in Tibet between 1995 and 1997, one of them laid by a monk, and a significant number of individual Tibetans are known to be actively seeking the taking up of arms; hundreds of Chinese soldiers and police have been beaten during demonstrations in Tibet, and at least one killed in cold blood, probably several more.[57] | ” |
Chinadaily.com reported on the discovery of weapons subsequent to the riots on March 14, 2008:
| “ | Police in Lhasa seized more than 100 guns, tens of thousands of bullets, several thousand kilograms of explosives and tens of thousands of detonators, acting on reports from lamas and ordinary people.[65] | ” |
And on 23 March, 2008, there was a bombing incident in the Qambo prefecture.[66]
To allow the Tibetan independence movement to grow unrestrained will only lead to violent riots or sabotage or secessionist war between the Tibetan separatists and the central government one day. The State representing the collective will and right of its people to prevent and preempt future catastrophe overrides the "human rights" of a small minority of people to foster unlawful independence that is potentially disastrous for all parties.
[edit] Self-determination
While the earliest ROC constitutional documents already claim Tibet as part of China, Chinese political leaders also acknowledged the principle of self-determination. For example, at a party conference in 1924, Kuomintang leader Sun Yat-sen issued a statement calling for the right of self-determination of all Chinese ethnic groups: "The Kuomintang can state with solemnity that it recognizes the right of self-determination of all national minorities in China and it will organize a free and united Chinese republic."[67] In 1931, the CCP issued a constitution for the short-lived Chinese Soviet Republic which states that Tibetans and other ethnic minorities, "may either join the Union of Chinese Soviets or secede from it."[68][69] It is notable that China was in a state of civil war at the time and that the "Chinese Soviets" only represents a faction. Saying that Tibet may secede from the "Chinese Soviets" does not mean that it can secede from China. The quote above is merely a statement of Tibetans' freedom to choose their political orientation. The possibility of complete secession was denied by Communist leader Mao Zedong in 1938: "They must have the right to self-determination and at the same time they should continue to unite with the Chinese people to form one nation". [69] This policy was codified in PRC's first constitution which, in Article 3, reaffirmed China as a "single multi-national state," while the "national autonomous areas are inalienable parts".[69] The Chinese government insists that the United Nations documents, which codifies the principle of self-determination, provides that the principle shall not be abused in disrupting territorial integrity: "Any attempt aimed at the partial or total disruption of the national unity and the territorial integrity of a country is incompatible with the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations...."[70]
[edit] Legitimacy
The PRC also points to what it claims are the autocratic, oppressive and theocratic policies of the government of Tibet before 1959, its toleration of existence of serfdom and slaves[56][32], its renunciation of Arunachal Pradesh which China regards as a part of Tibet occupied by India, and its association with India and other foreign countries, and as such claims the Government of Tibet in Exile has no legitimacy to govern Tibet and no credibility or justification in criticizing PRC's policies.
The People's Liberation Army's march into Tibet in 1951 was not without the support of Tibetan people, including the 10th Panchen Lama. Ian Buruma writes:
| “ | ...It is often forgotten that many Tibetans, especially educated people in the larger towns, were so keen to modernize their society in the mid-20th century that they saw the Chinese communists as allies against rule by monks and serf-owning landlords. The Dalai Lama himself, in the early 1950s, was impressed by Chinese reforms and wrote poems praising Chairman Mao.[3] | ” |
Instances have been documented when the PRC government gained support from a portion of the Tibetan population, including monastic leaders[71], monks[72], nobility[73][74] and ordinary Tibetans[73] prior to the crackdown in the 1959 uprising. The PRC government and some Tibetan leaders[71] characterize PLA's operation as a peaceful liberation of Tibetans from a "feudal serfdom system."(和平解放西藏).[75][76]
When Tibet complained to the United Nations through El Salvador about Chinese "invasion" in November 1950 -- after China captured Chamdo (or Qamdo) when Tibet failed to respond by the deadline to China's demand for negotiation--[77] members debated about it but refused to admit the "Tibet Question" into the agenda of the U.N. General Assembly. Key stakeholder India told the General Assembly that "the Peking Government had declared that it had not abandoned its intention to settle the difficulties by peaceful means", and that "the Indian Government was certain that the Tibet Question could still be settled by peaceful means". The Russian delegate said that "China's sovereignty over Tibet had been recognized for a long time by the United Kingdom, the United States, and the U.S.S.R." The United Nations postponed this matter on the pretext Tibet was officially an "autonomous nationality region belonging to territorial China", and because the outlook of peaceful settlement seemed good. [78][79]
Subsequently, The Agreement Between the Central Government and the Local Government of Tibet on Method for the Peaceful Liberation of Tibet, also known as Seventeen-Point Agreement, was signed between delegates of China and Tibet on 23 May 1951. The Dalai Lama had ample time and opportunity to repudiate and denounce the Seventeen-Point Agreement. He was encouraged and instigated to do so with promise of public support by the US, which by now had become hostile to Communist-ruled China.[80]
On May 29, the 10th Panchen Erdeni (i.e. 10th Panchen Lama) and the Panchen Kampus Assembly made a formal statement, expressing their heartfelt support for the agreement. The statement indicated their resolution to guarantee the correct implementation of the agreement and to realize solidarity between the different ethnic groups of China and ethnic solidarity among the Tibetans; and on May 30, the 10th Panchen Erdeni telegrammed the 14th Dalai Lama, expressing his hope for unity and his vow to support the 14th Dalai Lana and the government of Tibet with the implementation of the agreement under the guidance of the Central Government and Chairman Mao.[81]
The Agreement was finally accepted by Tibet's National Assembly, which then advised the Dalai Lama to accept it. Finally, on 24 October 1951, the Dalai Lama dispatched a telegram to Mao Zedong:
| “ | The Tibet Local Government as well as the ecclesiastic and secular People unanimously support this agreement, and under the leadership of Chairman Mao and the Central People's Government, will actively support the People's Liberation Army in Tibet to consolidate defence, drive out imperialist influences from Tibet and safeguard the unification of the territory and sovereignty of the Motherland.[82] | ” |
On 28 October 1951, the Panchen Rinpoche [i.e. Panchen Lama] made a similar public statement accepting the agreement. He urged the "people of Shigatse to give active support" to carrying out the agreement.[83]
Tsering Shakya writes about the general acceptance of the Tibetans toward the Seventeen-Point Agreement, and its legal significance:
| “ | The most vocal supporters of the agreement came from the monastic community...As a result many Tibetans were willing to accept the agreement....Finally there were strong factions in Tibet who felt that the agreement was acceptable...this section was led by the religious community...In the Tibetans' view their independence was not a question of international legal status, but as Dawa Norbu writes, "Our sense of independence was based on the independence of our way of life and culture, which was more real to the unlettered masses than law or history, canons by which the non-Tibetans decide the fate of Tibet...This was the first formal agreement between Tibet and Communist China and it established the legal basis for Chinese rule in Tibet." [84] | ” |
Thus, the People's Liberation Army entered Tibet peacefully following the signing of the Seventeen Point Agreement.
[edit] The view of the Tibetan Government-in-Exile
In 1959, the 14th Dalai Lama fled Tibet and established a government in exile at Dharamsala in northern India. This group claims sovereignty over various ethnically or historically Tibetan areas now governed by China. Aside from the Tibet Autonomous Region, an area that was administered directly by the Dalai Lama's government until 1951, the group also claims Amdo (Qinghai) and eastern Kham (western Sichuan)[86]. About 45 percent of China's ethnic Tibetans live in the Tibet Autonomous Region, according to the 2000 census. Prior to 1949, much of Amdo and eastern Kham were governed by local rulers and even warlords.[citation needed]
"During the time of Genghis Khan and Altan Khan of the Mongols, the Ming dynasty of the Chinese, and the Qing Dynasty of the Manchus, Tibet and China cooperated on the basis of benefactor and priest relationship," according to a proclamation issued by 13th Dalai Lama in 1913. The relationship did not imply "subordination of one to the other." He condemned the Chinese authorities for attempting to colonize Tibetan territory in 1910-12. "We are a small, religious, and independent nation," the proclamation states.[87]
The view of the current Dalai Lama is as follows:
| “ | During the 5th Dalai Lama's time [1617-1682], I think it was quite evident that we were a separate sovereign nation with no problems. The VIth Dalai Lama [1683-1706] was spiritually pre-eminent, but politically, he was weak and disinterested. He could not follow the Vth Dalai Lama's path. This was a great failure. So, then the Chinese influence increased. During this time, the Tibetans showed quite a deal of respect to the Chinese. But even during these times, the Tibetans never regarded Tibet as a part of China. All the documents were very clear that China, Mongolia and Tibet were all separate countries. Because the Chinese emperor was powerful and influential, the small nations accepted the Chinese power or influence. You cannot use the previous invasion as evidence that Tibet belongs to China. In the Tibetan mind, regardless of who was in power, whether it was the Manchus, the Mongols or the Chinese, the east of Tibet was simply referred to as China. In the Tibetan mind, India and China were treated the same; two separate countries.[88] | ” |
The International Commission of Jurists concluded that from 1913 to 1950 Tibet demonstrated the conditions of statehood as generally accepted under international law. In the opinion of the commission, the government of Tibet conducted its own domestic and foreign affairs free from any outside authority, and countries with whom Tibet had foreign relations are shown by official documents to have treated Tibet in practice as an independent State.[89] [90]
The United Nations General Assembly passed resolutions urging respect for the rights of Tibetans in 1959[91], 1961[92] and 1965.[93] The 1961 resolution asserts that "principle of self-determination of peoples and nations" applies to the Tibetan people.
The Tibetan Government in Exile views current PRC rule in Tibet as colonial and illegitimate, motivated solely by the natural resources and strategic value of Tibet, and in gross violation of both Tibet's historical status as an independent country and the right of Tibetan people to self-determination. It also points to PRC's autocratic policies, divide-and-rule policies, and what it contends are assimilationist policies, and regard those as an example of ongoing Chinese imperialism aimed at destroying Tibet's distinct ethnic makeup, culture, and identity, thereby cementing it as an indivisible part of China. That said, the Dalai Lama has recently stated that he wishes only for Tibetan autonomy, and not separation from China, under certain democratic conditions, like freedom of speech and expression and genuine self-rule. Another view supported by a number of international groups, including the Free Tibet Campaign, is that Tibet should be granted total independence from China.
[edit] Historical Status
Among the historical claims to Tibetan sovereignty, supporters note that during the Yuan Dynasty, it was the Mongols who conquered Tibet, not the Chinese, and that the Mongols administered Tibet and China separately and very differently, allowing the Tibetans much greater autonomy.[94]
Furthermore, Tibet was independent for almost 300 years after the fall of the Mongol Empire, from 1349 to 1642, during which time Ming Dynasty nominally granted titles to certain Tibetan officials but effectively exercised no control over Tibetan affairs or over the composition of the Tibetan government.
Although supporters concede Chinese influence increased during the Qing dynasty, they point out that Tibet waged war against Jammu in 1841-1842 and with Nepal in 1854-55 without Chinese assistance, an indication of effective sovereignty.
[edit] Third-Party views
Thomas Heberer, a leading China expert in Germany, declared in an article published on April 16, 2008 in the German daily Die Tageszeitung.
| “ | No country in the world has ever recognized the independence of Tibet or declared that Tibet is an 'occupied country'. For all countries in the world, Tibet is Chinese territory.[95] | ” |
Other Tibetologists write that no country publicly accepts Tibet as an independent state,[96][97][98][99] despite several instances of government officials appealing to their superiors to do so.[100][101] Treaties signed by Britain and Russia in the early years of the twentieth century,[102][4] and others signed by Nepal and India in the 1950s,[103] recognized Tibet's political subordination to China. The Americans presented their view on 15 May 1943:
| “ | For its part, the Government of the United States has borne in mind the fact that...the Chinese constitution lists Tibet among areas constituting the territory of the Republic of China. This Government has at no time raised a question regarding either of these claims.[104][48] | ” |
The 1994 U.S. State Department report to Congress declares:
| “ | Historically the U.S. has acknowledged Chinese sovereignty over Tibet. Since at least 1966, U.S. policy has explicitly recognized the Tibet Autonomous Region...as part of the People’s Republic of China. This long-standing policy is consistent with the view of the entire international community, including all China’s neighbors: no country recognizes Tibet as a sovereign state. Because we do not recognize Tibet as an independent state, the U.S. does not conduct diplomatic relations with the self-styled 'Tibetan government-in-exile'.[105] | ” |
In 2008, European Union leader Jose Manuel Barroso stated that the EU recognized Tibet as integral part of China:[106][107]
| “ | I have confirmed that the EU is attached to the territorial integrity and unity of China, and that naturally applies to Tibet [108] | ” |
This lack of legal recognition of independence has forced even some strong supporters of the refugees to admit that:
| “ | ...even today international legal experts sympathetic to the Dalai Lama's cause find it difficult to argue that Tibet ever technically established its independence of the Chinese Empire, imperial, or republican.[109] | ” |
| “ | The Tibetan government issued postage stamps starting in 1913 (same year as Australia first issued postage stamps) - up until military take over by China in mid-20th century. Tibet had its own postage stamps before Ireland (1922) and before Iraq (1923). [2] photos of Tibetan postage stamps</ref> |
” |
Image is from "International Junior Postage Stamp Album" printed in 1939 by Scott Publ, NY or can be seen at http://wonderfull.com/tibetstamp.jpg
[edit] See also
|
Http://wonderfull.com/tibetstamp.jpg
Tibet issued postage stamps between 1913 (same year as Australia first issued postage stamps) - up until military take over by China in mid-20th century. |
Image is from "International Junior Postage Stamp Album" printed in 1939 by Scott Publ, NY.
|
[edit] References
- ^ History of Tibet
- ^ The Issue of Tibet in China-US Relations During The Second World War
- ^ a b The last of the Tibetans By Ian Buruma
- ^ a b c d The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XIV. Published 1912: Tibet
- ^ Explorations in Tibet, National Geographic, Sept 1903, pp353-335
- ^ a b Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911 edition): Tibet and China; the "present system of government" is described in the section Tibet:Government
- ^ Zahiruddin Ahmad, "China and Tibet, 1708-1959. A Resume of Facts", 1960, p7
- ^ Goldstein, 1997, p19 & p134 n15; The Ordinance was jointly drafted by General Fu Kangan, the Dalai Lama and the Panchen Lama in 1792 and promulgated by the Qing Emperor one year later.
- ^ Tibet, China and the United States: Reflections on the Tibet Question by Melvyn C. Goldstein
- ^ The History of Tibet: Volume III The Modern Period: 1895-1959 edited by Alex McKay, London and New York: Routledge Curzon (2003), p.9
- ^ A wall painting showing the 13th Dalai Lama kneeling before the Dowager Queen
- ^ Grunfeld, A. Tom, The Making of Modern Tibet, p. 42, reads in part "Both (Tibetan and Chinese) accounts agree that the Dalai Lama was exempt from the traditional kowtow symbolizing total subservience; he was, however, required to kneel before the emperor."
- ^ For PRC's position, see State Council's whitepaper Tibet - Its Ownership and Human Rights Situation, 1992 and Beijing Review's 100 Question about Tibet, 1989; for ROC's position, see Government Information Office's online publication
- ^ Grunfeld, A. Tom, Reassessing Tibet Policy, 2000 (also in PDF file)
- ^ Grunfeld, 1996, p256
- ^ A History of Modern Tibet, 1913-1951: The Demise of the Lamaist State by Melvyn Goldstein, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press(1989), p822
- ^ Goldstein, Melvyn C., A History of Modern Tibet: 1913-1951, 1989, pp 239-241, 248, 271
- ^ Grunfeld, A. Tom, The Making of Modern Tibet, M.E. Sharpe, 1996, p245, regarding Kham and Amdo: "The historical reality is that the Dalai Lamas have not ruled these outer areas since the mid-eighteenth century, and during the Simla Conference of 1913, the 13th Dalai Lama was even willing to sign away rights to them"
- ^ a b c History of Tibet
- ^ The Consistent Stand Taken by the Successive Chinese Central Governments towards the Sovereignty over Tibet after the Revolution of 1911
- ^ Provisional Constitution of the Republic of China, issued March, 1912; Constitution of the Republic of China, issued May, 1914; Provisional Constitution in the Political Tutelage Period of the Republic of China, issued June 1931
- ^ a b "Did Tibet Become an Independent Country after the Revolution of 1911?", China Internet Information Center
- ^ The History of Tibet By Alex McKay (ed), London: RoutledgeCurzon (2003) p.427,571
- ^ A History of Modern Tibet, 1913–1951: The Demise of the Lamaist State by Melvyn C. Goldstein, 1989, p227
- ^ On the Thirteenth Dalai Lama Ngawang Lozang Thubten Gyatso by DORJE TSETEN, pdf p12,14,16-17
- ^ Goldstein, Melvyn C., A History of Modern Tibet: 1913-1951, 1989, p241: Dalai Lama was more concerned with border disputes than independence.
- ^ The Attitude of the Tibet Region towards the Central Government of China after the Revolution of 1911
- ^ Li, T.T., The Historical Status of Tibet, King's Crown Press, Columbia University, 1956
- ^ a b A Short History of Tibet by T.T. Moh
- ^ A History of Modern Tibet, 1913–1951: The Demise of the Lamaist State by Melvyn C. Goldstein, 1989, p.263
- ^ McKay (ed), p419-431; Panchen Lama's speech about unification of five nationalities, p422; Panchen Lama preached resistance against Japanese, p425; Panchen Lama preached about principles of unity and peace for the border regions, p.429; under the protection Chinese troops, p.431
- ^ a b c d e Friendly Feudalism: The Tibet Myth (updated 2007) by Michael Parenti
- ^ The History of Tibet By Alex McKay (ed), London: RoutledgeCurzon (2003) p571; "the coronation of the Dalai Lama"; the British representative Basil Gould there was not afforded the privilege to attend the installation ceremony; Note 2 on p.572
- ^ Wu Chung hsin walking towards a sedan chair "Information" of the photo: Richardson discusses Wu's mission to Lhasa in Tibet and Its History(2nd Ed.)Boston & London: Shambala (1984), "Wu also claimed that he personally conducted the enthronement and that, in gratitude, the Dalai Lama prostrated himself in the direction of Peking." (p. 154)
- ^ The Search for, and Installation of 5-Year-Old Tenzin Gyatso as the 14th Dalai Lama. Video No. 2 (in Chinese)
- ^ 奥运会、“藏独”和文化自信 Chinese article, retrieved on April 17,2008
- ^ The Issue of Tibet in China-US Relations During The Second World War
- ^ For the British and U.S. positions on Tibet, see Goldstein, 1989, p 399, p386, UK Foreign Office Whitepaper: Tibet and the Question of Chinese Suzerainty (10 April 1943), Foreign Office Records: FO371/35755 and aide-mémoire sent by the US Department of States to the British Embassy in Washington, D.C. (dated 15 May 1943), Foreign Office Records: FO371/35756
- ^ A History of Modern Tibet, 1913-1951: The Demise of the Lamaist State by Melvyn Goldstein, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press(1989), p673-4
- ^ A History of Modern Tibet, 1913-1951: The Demise of the Lamaist State by Melvyn Goldstein, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press(1989), p759
- ^ Jacques Gernet's A History of Chinese Civilization [Cambridge University Press, 1996] saying "From 1751 onwards Chinese control over Tibet became permanent and remained so more or less ever after, in spite of British efforts to seize possession of this Chinese protectorate at the beginning of the twentieth century."
- ^ a b Dalai Lama Group Says It Got Money From CIA
- ^ Reassessing Tibet Policy by A. Tom Grunfeld; Tibet, China and the United States: Reflections on the Tibet Question by Melvyn C. Goldstein; Tibet, the 'great game' and the CIA
- ^ Origins of So-Called "Tibetan Independence, Information Office of the State Council, 1992
- ^ "Tibetan issue": evolution and way out
- ^ Tibet, China and the United States: Reflections on the Tibet Questionp.4, by Melvyn C. Goldstein
- ^ The United States, Tibet and the Cold War Melvyn C. Goldstein, p149 or pdf p3 [footnote 10]
- ^ a b c d e f Reassessing Tibet Policy by Tom Gunfeld
- ^ Global Researcher,"Democratic Imperialism": Tibet, China, and the National Endowment for Democracy by Michael Barker
- ^ F. William Engdahl's Website
- ^ Why Washington plays 'Tibet Roulette' with China By William Engdahl (china.org.cn). Article downloadable on Engdahl's website.
- ^ The Olympic Lever; read also Operations Against China and The Olympic Torch Relay Campaign
- ^ China rejects Spain's 'genocide' claims
- ^ He May Be a God, but He’s No Politician By PATRICK FRENCH
- ^ Contemporary Tibet: Politics, Development, and Society in a Disputed Region by Barry Sautman and June Teufel Dreyer, New York: M.E.Sharpe (2006),p12
- ^ a b For existence of serfdom and slaves, see Grunfeld, 1996, pp12-17 and Bell, Charles, 1927, pp78-79; for other forms of human rights violation, see Bessac, Frank, "This Was the Perilous Trek to Tragedy", Life, 13 Nov 1950, pp130-136, 198, 141; Ford, Robert W., "Wind Between The Worlds", New York, 1957, p37; MacDonald, David, "The Land of the Lamas", London, 1929, pp196-197
- ^ a b c Robert Barnett's passages extracted from Steve Lehman, The Tibetans: Struggle to Survive, Umbrage Editions, New York, 1998. pdf p.12
- ^ When Christianity and Lamaism Met: The Changing Fortunes of Early Western Missionaries in Tibet by Hsiao-ting Lin
- ^ The History of Tibet By Alex McKay (ed), London: RoutledgeCurzon (2003) p640-1,643 Christian missionaries banned
- ^ Jane Ardley, The Tibetan Independence Movement: Political, Religious and Ghandian Perspectives London: RoutledgeCurzon (2002), p.175
- ^ Grunfeld, 1996, p180
- ^ Passages extracted by Robert Barnett from Steve Lehman, The Tibetans: Struggle to Survive, Umbrage Editions, New York, 1998. pdf p.9
- ^ http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2008-04/12/content_6612118.htm Retrieved on 12 April 2008
- ^ Passages extracted by Robert Barnett from Steve Lehman, The Tibetans: Struggle to Survive, Umbrage Editions, New York, 1998. pdf p.13
- ^ a b http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2008-04/11/content_6608921.htm 'Tibetan Youth Congress' is pure terrorist organization Retrieved on 13 April 2008
- ^ Police crack bombing at Tibetan township government building
- ^ Quoted from National and Minority Policies, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science: Report of China 277, 1951, pp148-149
- ^ Brandt, C., Schwartz, B. and Fairbank, John K. (ed.), A Documentary History of Chinese Communism, 1960, pp223-224
- ^ a b c "Report on the International Seminar on the Nationality Question"
- ^ United Nations Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples
- ^ a b Goldstein, Melvyn C., "A history of modern Tibet", pp683-687
- ^ Ford, R. W., "Wind between the Worlds", p178, saying: ' There was no sacking of monasteries at this time. On the contrary, the Chinese took great care not to cause offense through ignorance. They soon had the monks thanking the gods for their deliverance. '
- ^ a b Grunfeld, A.T., "The Making of Modern Tibet", p115, saying: ' By most accounts there were some Tibetans who were pleased to see the Han in Tibet. Peter Aufschneiter told British diplomats in Kathmandu that ordinary Tibetans liked the Han because they were honest and they distributed land. Among the younger generation of the nobility it was seen as an opportunity to make some positive changes. '
- ^ Grunfeld, A.T., "The Making of Modern Tibet", M. E. Sharpe, 1996, p127, saying ' When the communists first arrived in Lhasa, only a few of the aristocracy joined them enthusiastically. In Kham, however, the upper classes welcomed them as potential liberators from the strongly disliked Lhasan officials. '
- ^ Xinhuanet.com. "Xinhuanet.com." 人民解放軍和平解放西藏.
- ^ "[1]." Full Text of Speech By Chinese President Hu Jintao at Tibet's Peaceful Liberation Anniversary Rally
- ^ Tell you a true Tibet -- Peaceful Liberation of Tibet
- ^ A History of Modern Tibet, 1913-1951: The Demise of the Lamaist State by Melvyn C. Goldstein, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press(1989), p676-9,699,729-735
- ^ Melvyn C. Goldstein, The Snow Lion and the Dragon: China, Tibet, and the Dalai Lama Berkeley:University of California Press, (1999), p41; cited by Yuliya Babayeva in the article The Khampa Uprising: Tibetan Resistance Against the Chinese Invasionpdf p15.
- ^ A History of Modern Tibet, 1913-1951: The Demise of the Lamaist State by Melvyn Goldstein, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London: University of California Press(1989), p761-769,784-812
- ^ Signing of the Agreement on Methods for the Peaceful Liberation of TibetRetrieved on 25 April 2008.
- ^ The History of Tibet: Volume III The Modern Period: 1895-1959 edited by Alex McKay, London and New York: Routledge Curzon (2003), p.603
- ^ The History of Tibet: Volume III The Modern Period: 1895-1959 edited by Alex McKay, London and New York: Routledge Curzon (2003), p.604
- ^ The History of Tibet: Volume III The Modern Period: 1895-1959 edited by Alex McKay, London and New York: Routledge Curzon (2003), p.604
- ^ Flag of Tibet
- ^ Goldstein, Melvyn C., The Snow Lion and the Dragon, University of California Press, 1997, p71
- ^ Independence as Tibet’s Only Option: Why the ‘Middle Path’ is a Dead End, Phayul.com, Jan 2007
- ^ Gyatso, Tenzin, Dalai Lama XIV. Tibet, China and the World: A Compilation of Interviews, Dharamsala, 1989, p. 31.
- ^ Legal Inquiry Committee, Tibet and Chinese People's Republic, Geneva: International Commission of Jurists, 1960, pp. 5,6
- ^ Walt Van Praag, Michael C. van, The Status of Tibet: History, Rights and Prospects in International Law, (Westview, 1987)
- ^ United Nations General Assembly - Resolution 1353 (XIV)
- ^ United Nations General Assembly - Resolution 1723 (XVI)
- ^ United Nations General Assembly - Resolution 2079 (XX)
- ^ Tibet Justice Center - Tibet Justice Center Reports - The Case Concerning Tibet - Summary
- ^ West is 'waging a new Cold War against China' Chinadaily.com quotes German newspaper. Retrieved on April 17,2008
- ^ Contemporary Tibet: Politics, Development, and Society in a Disputed Region by Barry Sautman and June Teufel Dreyer, New York: M.E.Sharpe (2006),p3
- ^ Clark, Gregory, "In fear of China", 1969, saying: ' Tibet, although enjoying independence at certain periods of its history, had never been recognised by any single foreign power as an independent state. The closest it has ever come to such recognition was the British formula of 1943: suzerainty, combined with autonomy and the right to enter into diplomatic relations. '
- ^ Clark, Gregory, "No rest for 'China threat' lobby", Japan Times, 7 Jan 2006
- ^ Grunfeld, A. Tom, "The Making of Modern Tibet", p258
- ^ Goldstein, 1989, p717
- ^ The History of Tibet By Alex McKay (ed), London: RoutledgeCurzon (2003) p657-8
- ^ Treaties of 1906, 1907 and 1914
- ^ Since then Tibet has been regarded by Nepal and the Republic of India as a Region of China
- ^ Aide-mémoire sent by the US Department of States to the British Embassy in Washington, D.C.(dated 15 May 1943), Foreign Office Records: FO371/35756, quoted from Goldstein, 1989, p386
- ^ Report mandated by Section 536(a)(2) of Public Law 103-236, Foreign Relations Authorization Act, Fiscal Years 1994-1995 "Relations of the United States with Tibet"; cited in The United States, Tibet and the Cold War by Melvyn C. Goldstein p162-3
- ^ EU boss wants good news soon on Tibet, NEWS.com.au, 25 April 2008
- ^ EU's Barroso Encouraged by Tibet Talks with China, Deutsche Welle, 25 April 2008
- ^ EU considers Tibet part of China, Daily Times (Pakistan), 26 April 2008
- ^ Bradsher, Henry S., "Tibet Struggles to Survive, Foreign Affairs, July 1969

