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| Canada PM discusses
Tibetan rights with Dalai Lama |
| Reuters |
By David Ljunggren
 |
| Canadian Prime
Minister Paul Martin (R) greets Tibetan spiritual leader
the Dalai Lama, in Ottawa April 23, 2004. Martin is the
first prime minister in Canadian history to meet with the
Dalai Lama, who is on a 19 day tour of Canada.
REUTERS/Pool |
OTTAWA, April 23 - Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin met the
Dalai Lama on Friday and said the two men had discussed human
rights in Tibet, a move that is bound to anger China.
Beijing had warned Martin against meeting the Dalai Lama, who has
run a government-in-exile in India since fleeing Tibet after a
failed uprising in 1959. China regards the spiritual leader as a
dangerous separatist.
Martin, the first sitting Canadian prime minister to meet the
Dalai Lama, talked with the Nobel Peace Prize winner for 15
minutes in the presence of Ottawa's Roman Catholic archbishop.
Although Martin had insisted before the encounter that he would
only discuss spiritual affairs, he emerged afterward to reveal the
talk had also touched upon Tibet.
"We did discuss human rights. We discussed human rights
generally and we discussed human rights in Tibet," Martin
told reporters in brief remarks after the meeting.
Chinese troops imposed Communist rule on Tibet in 1950 and the
Dalai Lama fled nine years later after a failed uprising. China
claims Tibet as part of its territory.
The Dalai Lama complained on Thursday that China had denied
Tibetans freedom of religion, thought and speech. He also said he
felt Canada might be able to help bring Tibet and China together.
 |
| Canadian Prime
Minister Paul Martin (L) meets the Dalai Lama in Ottawa,
April 23, 2004. Martin is the first prime minister in
Canadian history to meet with the Dalai Lama, who is on a
19 day tour of Canada. REUTERS/Pool |
"The Dalai Lama talked about the situation in Tibet and gave
details about what was happening there," Martin spokesman
Mario Lague told reporters.
"Then he (the prime minister) asked 'What can we do?' and the
Dalai Lama just said 'In general, keep talking about human rights
because that's important'. He didn't make any specific
requests," Lague added.
The Dalai Lama, in Canada for a three-week tour, declined to
comment on the meeting, saying only that it had been "very
good".
Around 50 supporters of the Tibetan cause gathered on the street
outside, some of them shouting "Three cheers for Paul
Martin" and waving banners praising the prime minister. |
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