Historic opportunity for Hu Jintao to engage Dalai Lama
Tuesday March 27, 2012 09:17:33 AM,
Mayank Chhaya, IANS
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History beckons China's President Hu Jintao during his India visit
if he sheds entrenched antipathies and chooses to directly engage
the Dalai Lama with a specific intention of initiating the process
of resolving the festering problem of the Tibetan region that is
in turmoil and have been aflame with self-immolations, that spread
to Delhi Monday with a 26-year-old youth setting himself on fire.
Although Hu is visiting to attend the 4th summit of Brazil,
Russia, India, China, South Africa (BRICS) on March 29, its
sidelines are fraught with an opportunity for him to make a
statesmen-like gesture by meeting the Dalai Lama.
With 29 self-immolations in the past one year of which 22 have
been fatal and seven in the past three weeks alone, Hu could
soothe the growing unrest in a region which he once controlled
with an iron fist as the political commissar of the People's
Liberation Army units. He was also the Communist Party's Regional
Committee Secretary of the Tibetan Autonomous Region (TAR) in
1988. If there is one individual in the Chinese establishment who
could make a bold gesture on Tibet, it is Hu.
Seven years younger than the Dalai Lama, President Hu has the
political and administrative weight to break some outdated moulds
and at least initiate the process of direct engagement with the
Tibetan leader. Realistically, there is no prospect of the meeting
taking place of course, but that is precisely where it requires
the Chinese leader to do something entirely unexpected. Starting
later this year and over a period of six months Hu is expected to
give up at least two of his three powerful positions as president
of the People's Republic of China, chair of the Central Military
Commission, and party secretary of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
There could not be a more opportune time for him to exercise
gumption.
While Hu is not known for dramatic gestures and has distinguished
himself throughout his long career as a low-key and solidly
grounded political figure, there is nothing intrinsic reason to
stop him from doing something out of the ordinary. No one expects
a single Chinese leader, even someone of Hu's unquestionable
consequence, to even begin to wind down decades of Sino-Tibetan
animus. However, from all indications Tibet appears only tenuously
welded to China; and the rash of self-immolations are seen to
incinerate Beijing's idea of harmony.
The self-immolation of 26-year-old exiled Tibetan activist Jamphel
Yeshi on the streets of Delhi in the run-up to the Hu visit this
week serves as a macabre reminder to both the Chinese leader and
India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh that things can go out of
control very quickly. China has officially described the Tibetan
self-immolators as "terrorists" acting under a pernicious external
influence. The description might satisfy the narrow official
purpose of how to treat this deeply disturbing means of protest,
but it is unlikely to address the broader challenge of putting a
lid on the growing restiveness. It is in this context that
President Hu should seek out the Dalai Lama for a one-on-one
meeting.
Over the last six decades Beijing has with some manifest success
pushed Tibet into a tight territorial and cultural integration but
frequent outbursts of protests over the years have shown the
assimilation is nowhere close to being as harmonious as it would
have the world believe. With the Dalai Lama having long emphasized
meaningful autonomy for Tibet within China as opposed to complete
independence and steadfastly pursued a peaceful and nonviolent
middle-path, it is time for Beijing to yield some ground rather
than sticking to its tired out of hand rejection of the Tibetan
leader.
President Hu ought to be aware of the rise of a youthful and
genuinely independent and democratic polity under Lobsang Sangay
as the Tibetan prime minister-in-exile. By divesting political
powers specifically invested in the person of the Dalai Lama to
the new elected leadership, Tenzin Gyatso has already sent a
strong signal to China that he would remain only a spiritual face
of Tibet who has no intentions of controlling the lives of close
to six million Tibetans.
From the Indian perspective the Hu visit also offers Manmohan
Singh an extraordinary opportunity to make a lasting contribution
to the decades-old problem. Perhaps the Indian prime minister too
can spend some of his own political capital on bringing Hu and the
Dalai Lama together.
Mayank Chhaya is a Chicago-based commentator and
writer whose authorized biography of the Dalai Lama has so far
been published in 22 languages He can be contacted at m@mayankchhaya.net
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