| Desmond Tutu (left) with Dalai Lama (right). (REUTERS/Mike Hutchings) |
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Beijing
(ANTARA News/AFP) - Twelve Nobel laureates including South African Archbishop
Desmond Tutu have written to China`s president urging him to open talks with
the Dalai Lama after a series of self-immolations by Tibetans.
More than
30 Tibetans -- many of them Buddhist monks and nuns -- have set themselves
alight in China`s Tibetan-inhabited areas since the start of March 2011 to
protest Beijing`s rule.
"The
international community is concerned by the drastic expressions of resentment
by the people of Tibet through self-immolation," read the letter,
addressed to President Hu Jintao.
"The
Chinese government should hear their voices, understand their grievances and
find a non-violent solution. That solution is offered by our friend and brother
His Holiness the Dalai Lama," it added.
"We
strongly urge the Chinese government to seize the opportunity he provides for a
meaningful dialogue. Once formed, this channel should remain open, active and
productive."
Chinese
authorities have repeatedly accused the Dalai Lama of inciting the protests in
a bid to split the vast Himalayan region from the rest of the nation, a charge
denied by the Tibetan spiritual leader.
Many
Tibetans in China complain of religious repression, as well as a gradual
erosion of their culture, which they blame in part on a growing influx of
majority Han Chinese in areas where they live.
The letter,
also signed by the East Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta and Polish freedom
fighter Lech Walesa, also appeals to Hu to allow religious freedom and peaceful
protests in Tibetan areas and open access to foreign journalists and diplomats.
Editor: Priyambodo RH
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