Britain asks China to resolve Tibet issue

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown on 2nd of February urged China to resolve the ‘underlying issues’ in Tibet.

Addressing a joint press conference with visiting Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, Brown also indicated that his country sought improvement on the human rights front in the world’s most populous nation.

"The UK will continue through our regular dialogue to seek rapid progress towards all international human rights standards and I urge further dialogue on the Chinese government to resolve the underlying issues in Tibet," Brown said.

Brown tempered this implied criticism, however, by crediting Wen’s social and economic policies with "lifting hundreds of millions of people out of poverty".

Prior to Wen’s visit, Brown has been warned not to sacrifice human rights concerns to the prospect of boosting exports.

Wen’s visit has been marked by raucous street protests in London, which saw around 50 pro-Tibetan demonstrators gather outside 10 Downing Street on Monday. Five pro-Tibet demonstrators were arrested in London on Sunday.

Tibet saw massive anti-China protests in March 2008 resulting in a harsh clampdown from Chinese authorities.

Brown insisted that human rights concerns had not been forgotten in the bilateral relationship.

In a written ministerial statement issued in October last year, British government went on to acknowledge that the exiled Tibetan leader the Dalai Lama has actually met conditions set by the Chinese government in order to have dialogue for a negotiated settlement on Tibet’s issue.

“Chinese Government has said that it is serious about dialogue and that it hopes for a positive outcome. It has set conditions for dialogue which we believe the Dalai Lama has met,” British Foreign Secretary David Miliband stated in the statement.

“No government which is committed to promoting international respect for human rights can remain silent on the issue of Tibet, or disinterested in a solution to its problems,” the statement further emphasised.

Source: www.phayul.com



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Can Dalai Lama Choose His Reincarnated Successor?

By MICHAEL POWELL, The New York Times
January 31, 2009

The search for the present Dalai Lama commenced in earnest in 1935 when the embalmed head of his deceased predecessor is said to have wheeled around and pointed toward northeastern Tibet.

Then, the story goes, a giant, star-shaped fungus grew overnight on the east side of the tomb. An auspicious cloud bank formed and a regent saw a vision of letters floating in a mystical lake, one of which — Ah — he took to refer to the northeast province of Amdo.

High lamas set off at a gallop and found a 2-year-old boy in a distant village. This child, they determined after a series of tests, was the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama.

There is little linear about lama succession in Tibet. And now, as the 14th Dalai Lama journeys into his 74th year, the question of how to pick his successor has come to preoccupy both him and his followers, as Tibet stands at an ever more precarious political pass.

14th Dalai Lama

A photograph of a painting of the 14th Dalai Lama, who was discovered by Buddhist leaders as a 2-year-old, with the aid of signs. Kanwal Krishna/Agence France-Presse

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Mandala of Deities Incense Series

Great post at http://olfactoryrescueservice.wordpress.com about Mandala of Deities Incense Series. Please visit a link to read this really good review.

Mandala of Deities Incense



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Angela Merkel: China should resume dialogue with Dalai Lama

German Chancellor Angela Merkel raised the issue of Tibet with visiting Chinese Premiere Wen Jiabao as he stopped over in Berlin on his European tour that excludes France.

Angela Merkel and Wen JiabaoMerkel urged Wen Jiabao to restart talks with the envoys of the Tibetan leader Dalai Lama. “Germany has an intense interest in the talks with the Dalai Lama resuming,” Merkel told reporters after meeting Wen.

Around 60 demonstrators were watching from distance amid tight security as the Chinese leader was welcomed with military honours at the German Chancellery.
She said Germany was willing to make a “constructive contribution” on the matter, adding that Germany did not question the one-China policy. "If there is anything Germany can do in this regard, we would like to help," she added.

“We talked about the situation in Tibet and from the German side, I emphasised that we have a common interest that talks with the Dalai Lama get under way,” said Merkel at a joint news conference with Wen.

The issue of Tibet had earlier escalated tensions between the two countries in 2007 when Merkel met the Dalai Lama who is viewed by Beijing as a ’splittist’ and a ‘wolf in a monk’s robe’. She was the first German chancellor to receive the Dalai Lama at the Chancellery. It took months for Beijing to forgive Merkel.

Now China is at loggerheads with France over President Nicolas Sarkozy’s meeting with the Dalai Lama in Poland last month. China cancelled an EU summit when French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who then held the EU presidency, announced his scheduled meeting with the Dalai Lama in Poland and met him eventually.

The talks between Dalai Lama’s envoys and Beijing came to a standstill after the eighth round of talks in October last year failed to produce any results. The exile Tibetan Prime Minister Samdhong Rinpoche said the Sino-Tibetan dialogue has failed to produce any positive changes in China’s Tibet policy.

“Therefore, the entire responsibility for the future status of our dialogues, irrespective of what it is going to be, lies squarely on the Chinese leaders,” he said last month.

China insists doors for talks are still open but categorically rejected a "Memorandum” on Genuine Autonomy for the Tibetan People submitted by the Tibetan envoys during the eighth round of talks calling it an "agenda of independence".

Source:
www.phayul.com



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Agra. Everything But Romantic Appeal

Everybody who’s craving for beauty and romanticism are now welcome to go somewhere else as in the following few passages I’m going to be extremely cynical.

Once upon a time there was a rich and mighty indian shah. Nevertheless he had whole harem of fine maidens for quenching his lust he got stuck to the only one loving her to death. Indian shahs knew nothing about contraception and so this poor maiden had to give birth to eight sons and six daughters virtually without resting or stopping. Giving birth to the last fourteenth child this heroic woman signed with a sense of relief and breathed her last. Because of this unexpected outcome her husband turned grey and spent most of state treasury on building huge white mausoleum. He was just about to spent the remaider of GDI on another mausoleum - exactly same but black - for himself but opposition formed out of his own sons was quick enough to put him from the throne to jail. And it was where he died overlooking white domes of Taj Mahal in the narrow loophole of his cell.

Generations of shahs came one ather enother, then there were English and finally India became democratic republic highly dependent on income from tourism. To see this monument of pitiless muslim love would cost you quite an amount - 750 rupees, enough to cross the whole country in a train from the very top to the very bottom or to live some days in a nice village by the ocean. And naturally Taj Mahal gave grow to a number of hotels, restaurants and souvenir shops just by it. But becides the white silhouette on the horizon Agra is an ordinary relatively dirty indian town.

Agra

If you belong to those backpackers in stretched out old t-shirts travelling along LonelyPlanet routes then your Agra most probably will begin with an autorikshaw to the Taj South Gate and one of local hostels or restaurants with some view of the monument.

Agra

Over the roofs of ordinary indian houses.

Agra

And with local sweets made from glucose, pumpkin, saffron or rose syrup.

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