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| Supporters of the Dalai Lama chanted and prayed at the Buddhist shrine in mountainous Dharamsala - home to Tibet's government in exile (AFP Photo/Money SHARMA) |
Huge crowds gathered at the Dalai Lama's temple in India Sunday to commemorate 60 years since the failed Tibetan uprising against Chinese rule that drove the spiritual leader into exile.
Supporters
of the 83-year-old peace icon chanted and prayed at the Buddhist shrine in
mountainous Dharamsala, where the Dalai Lama established a government-in-exile
after fleeing a deadly Chinese crackdown in Tibet in 1959.
Devotees in
the Indian hill station the Dalai Lama has called home for six decades waved
Tibet's colourful "snow lion" flag, which China has outlawed as a
symbol of separatism.
Some had
"Free Tibet" painted on their faces along with the colours and
distinct golden sun of the iconic flag.
"This
is a proud day," Lhakpa Tsering, a Tibetan living in exile in India, told
AFP in Dharamsala.
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Performers
danced and recited Tibetan songs at the temple for guests, which
organisers
said included parliamentarians from 10 nations (AFP Photo/Money SHARMA)
|
"Sixty
years we've been in exile. Still, our struggle is young and fresh and strong,
so we can give a message to China that until Tibetans remain, our struggle will
never end."
The Dalai
Lama himself was not present at the anniversary ceremony, but chief
representatives of the exiled Tibetan administration and foreign dignitaries
gathered for the solemn occasion.
Performers
dressed in traditional attire danced and recited Tibetan songs at the temple
for guests, which organisers said included parliamentarians from 10 nations.
A minute's
silence was held at the outset to remember those killed when China brutally
crushed the fledgling Tibetan revolt, a crackdown the government-in-exile
claimed killed tens of thousands.
Call for
dialogue
Buddhist
Tibet, a vast Himalayan area of plateaus and mountains, declared independence
from China in the early 20th century but Beijing took back control in 1951,
having sent in thousands of troops.
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The Dalai
Lama himself was not present at the ceremony, but chief representatives
of the
exiled Tibetan administration and foreign dignitaries were present (AFP
Photo/
Money SHARMA)
|
The Dalai
Lama -- chosen at the age of two in 1937 as the 14th incarnation of Tibetan
Buddhism's supreme religious leader -- was enthroned as head of state after the
Chinese invasion.
His
co-existence with the Beijing authorities was tense and when the Chinese
authorities summoned him to an event without his bodyguards on March 10,
Tibetans feared a trap that could endanger their leader.
Thousands
of his supporters assembled at his summer palace to prevent him from leaving;
thousands more demonstrated in Lhasa to demand the Chinese depart, the Dalai
Lama would later say.
Beijing
sent more troops into Tibet, and in the bloodshed that followed, refugees
poured over the border into Dharamsala -- already then a sanctuary for Tibetan
exiles fleeing Chinese repression.
The Dalai
Lama evaded Chinese authorities and slipped away dressed as a soldier, escaping
to India with an entourage of supporters in a gruelling two-week trek through
the Himalayas.
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Prime
Minister of the Tibetan government in exile Lobsang Sangay addressed the huge
crowds gathered at the Dalai Lama's temple in Dharmasala (AFP Photo/Money
SHARMA)
|
There he
formed a government-in-exile and demanded autonomy for Tibet, a decades-long
quest that would earn him worldwide respect as a figure of nonviolence. He won
the Nobel Prize in 1989.
He remains
a thorn in the side to China, which adamantly rejects any suggestion of Tibetan
autonomy and blacklisted the Dalai Lama as a dangerous "separatist".
Beijing
continues to be accused of political and religious repression in the region,
but insists Tibetans enjoy extensive freedoms and that it has brought economic
growth.
"If
(China) earnestly believes that co-operation can bring more peace, it should
renew dialogue with the envoys of His Holiness Dalai Lama," Lobsang
Sangay, President of the Tibetan government-in-exile.
"As we
have seen repeatedly, the envoys are ready to talk and peacefully resolve the
issue of Tibet through the 'middle-way approach'".
VIDEO: Tibetan supporters speak out at a rally in India to commemorate 60 years since the failed uprising against Chinese rule pic.twitter.com/LKhw92Xc4o— AFP news agency (@AFP) 10 maart 2019




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