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China's Yang in US amid Tibet, navy rifts
Washington (AFP) March 10, 2009 China's foreign minister was slated for his first talks Wednesday in President Barack Obama's Washington as rifts emerged between the Pacific powers over Tibet and naval rights. Obama has pledged a constructive relationship with the growing Asian giant on a range of priority issues including tackling the global economic crisis and climate change. Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi was scheduled to meet with Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner -- one of the few top US officials who speaks Chinese -- along with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who visited Beijing last month. But Yang's trip comes at a sensitive time with Tibetans holding worldwide demonstrations to mark Tuesday's 50th anniversary of China's bloody crackdown on the region that forced their leader the Dalai Lama into exile. With Clinton under fire at home for not being firmer on human rights, the State Department late Wednesday issued a statement urging China to review its policies in Tibet. It affirmed Washington's position that the vast Himalayan region is part of China. "At the same time, we are deeply concerned by the human rights situation in Tibetan areas," it said. White House spokesman Robert Gibbs made similar remarks. "We urge China to reconsider its policies in Tibet that have created tensions due to their harmful impact on Tibetan religion, culture, and livelihoods," the State Department said. It noted that the Dalai Lama himself accepts Tibet as part of China. Beijing regularly accuses the avowed pacifist monk of being a separatist. The United States said that "substantive dialogue" with the Dalai Lama's representatives could "lead to progress in bringing about solutions and can help achieve true and lasting stability in Tibet." China has engaged in dialogue with the Dalai Lama's representatives since 2002 but the talks have yielded no results. The Dalai Lama, now 73 and boasting a global following as a spiritual guide, said Tuesday at his home-in-exile in northern India that China had brought "hell on earth" to Tibet. Exiles say some 87,000 people were killed in the months following the 1959 crackdown, during which the Dalai Lama escaped to India on horseback. Rights groups say hundreds more died or are unaccounted for when China broke up another round of protests a year ago on the 49th anniversary of the uprising. China has also called on the US Congress to halt a separate resolution that would urge Beijing to end "repression" in Tibet. "We express serious concern over this," foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu said in Beijing. "We believe the US Congress resolution proposed by a few anti-China representatives disregards the history and reality of Tibet." But pro-Tibet lawmakers said the resolution, which could come up for a vote on Wednesday, would send a strong message to the Chinese foreign minister. "How fitting it is that the foreign minister of China should be here in the United States this very week on an official visit," Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen said. Her message to Yang was echoed by protesters who waved Tibetan flags and broke out in an uprising song outside a Chinese embassy building in Washington, as passing motorists honked to show support. "We hope he sees our message that there are thousands of people who believe the United States has a responsibility to speak out about the abuses in Tibet," said Yangchen Lhamo, an activist with Students for a Free Tibet. Despite early good feelings between China and the Obama administration, the two sides have also engaged in a war of words after a naval showdown in the South China Sea. The United States accused China of trying to physically block a US ship in international waters. Beijing hit back that the vessel -- used for US surveillance -- was engaged in "illegal activities" and demanded a halt. Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman rejected the call, telling reporters: "We are going to continue as we have to operate in international waters." The incident came just weeks after China and the United States agreed to resume high-level military exchanges, which were cut off last year by China amid anger over a proposed US arms package to rival Taiwan. Share This Article With Planet Earth
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Dalai Lama says Chinese-ruled Tibet 'hell on earth' Dharamshala, India (AFP) March 10, 2009 Tibet's exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama accused China of having brought "hell on earth" to his homeland in a speech Tuesday on the sensitive 50th anniversary of a failed uprising. |
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