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Russian
Buddhists trudge through snow to see Dalai Lama
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| Tatyana
Makeyeva - (AFP) |
ELISTA, Russia, 30 November (AFP) - Hundreds of Buddhists in
southern Russia marched through snow to see and hear the Dalai
Lama as he continued a long-awaited visit to the country in spite
of Chinese protests.
Nearly a thousand residents of the Buddhist region of Kalmykia
walked through heavily-falling snow to a monastery outside the
capital Elista, where Tibet's spiritual leader was due to speak
later in the day.
Tuesday marked the second of a three-day visit to Kalmykia by the
Dalai Lama, the first time in eight years that he has been allowed
onto Russian territory, and only the second time has visited the
Buddhist region.
"I would like to express my greeting to my longtime
friends," he said on Monday after flying in from New Delhi.
"My main interest is promotion of human values because I
believe that in order to have a happy human community and in order
to have a happy family, the basic human values are the
foundation," he said.
Monday marked the Dalai Lama's first trip to Kalmykia since 1992,
when he made a tour of Russia's Buddhist regions that also
included Buryatia and Tyva in Siberia.
"Even if it is a short visit, it is very important for
us," said Telo Rinpoche, the spiritual chief of Buddhists in
Kalmykia. "Thanks to the support of His Holiness the Dalai
Lama there has been great progress in the renaissance of the
Buddhist faith in Kalmykia."
Local residents have been asked to abstain from smoking and
drinking alcoholic beverages and authorities have promised to
close all casinos in Elista and its environs during the Dalai
Lama's three-day sojourn.
Kalmykia's flamboyant leader Kirsan Ilyumzhinov has held regular
visits with the spiritual leader and has tirelessly campaigned for
his visit to Russia.
It is the first time the Dalai Lama has been allowed onto Russian
territory since 1996, when he passed through on his way to
Mongolia. Russia has resisted other visits because of pressure
from China.
China, which has ruled Tibet since 1951, regularly protests over
the frequent travels of the Dalai Lama, whom it accuses of being a
separatist.
After Moscow announced that it would issue him a visa last Friday,
Beijing stressed that it was "against any country having
official relations with him."
Moscow said it had decided to relent on the visa issue because the
Dalai Lama's visit would "be strictly religious in
nature" and stressed that it viewed Tibet as an
"inalienable part" of China.
The Dalai Lama has lived in India since he fled Tibet in 1959 amid
a failed uprising against Chinese rule. He and the Tibetan
government-in-exile have their headquarters in the northern hill
station of Dharamsala. |
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Last updated: 30-Nov-2004
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