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Another
Nobel Laureate urge China to free Tibet
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| Keralanext.com
[February
2, 2007] |
Nobel laureate and
former Polish president Lech Walesa on Thursday called for a
coalition of nations - that believed in Mahatma Gandhi’s
Satyagraha movement of non-violent resistance - to prevail
upon China to free Tibet, a news report said.
NEW DELHI - “China could take a cue from former South
African president Frederik Willem de Klerk who freed Nelson
Mandela to lead the struggle against apartheid,” he told
the PTI news agency in an interview.
“But the question is, is the world capable of such kind of
coalition. My answer is - no, it is not ready yet,” Walesa
who is in New Delhi to participate in an international
conference to mark the centenary of the Satyagraha movement.
Walesa who led a movement that brought down the communist
dictatorship in Poland in 1989, said Tibet’s freedom could
not be achieved by the use of military force but by a change
of heart of the Chinese government.
His comments came after another Nobel laureate, Archbishop
Desmond Tutu, advocated independence for Tibet at a function
to award him the Gandhi Peace Prize in Delhi on Wednesday.
“We thank you (India) for giving refuge to one of the
greatest human beings, Dalai Lama (the Tibetan spiritual
leader) and pray that you help bring about freedom of his
Tibet,” Tutu was quoted by the local media as saying, at
the function that was attended by top Indian leaders.
Dalai Lama fled to India in 1959 after Chinese troops
overran Tibet and set up his government-in exile in northern
Indian hill town of Dharamsala. More than 70,000 Tibetan
refugees are estimated to be living in India.
Tutu’s remarks had created a flutter in the Indian
establishment, which later clarified that New Delhi
acknowledged the “One China” concept and these were
Tutu’s “personal views.”
India, as part of efforts to improve its strained ties with
China since a 1962 war, recognized the Tibet region as an
autonomous part of China in 2003.
The same year, Beijing recognized the eastern region of
Sikkim as part of India as both countries appointed special
representatives to settle their boundary dispute.
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Last updated: 5-Feb-2007
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