HISTORICAL OVERVIEW
Despite forty years of Chinese occupation and various policies designed to assimilator sinify Tibetans and to destroy their separate national, cultural and religious identity, the Tibetan people's determination to preserve their heritage and regain their freedom is as strong as ever. The situation has led to confrontation inside Tibet and to large scale Chinese propaganda efforts internationally.
1949-51 THE CHINESE INVASION
China's newly established communist government sent troops to invade Tibet in 1949-50. A treaty was imposed on the Tibetan government in May of that year, acknowledging sovereignty over Tibet but recognizing the Tibetan government's autonomy with respect to Tibetans internal affairs. As the Chinese consolidated their control, they repeatedly violated the treaty and open resistance to their rule grew, leading to the National Uprising in 1959 and the flight into India of Tibet's head of state and spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.
The international community reacted with shock at the events in Tibet. The question of Tibet was discussed on numerous occasions by the U.N. General Assembly between 1959 and 1965. Three resolutions were passed by the General Assembly condemning China's violations of human rights in Tibet and calling upon China to respect those rights, including Tibet's right to self-determination.
AFTER 1959: DESTRUCTION
The destruction of Tibet's culture and oppresion of its people was brutal during the twenty years following the uprising. 1.2 million Tibetans, one-fifth of the country's population, died as a result of China's policies; man y more languished in prisons and labor camps; and more then 6000 monasteries, temples and other cultural and historic buildings were destroyed and their contents pillaged. In 1980 Hu Yao Bang, General Secretary of the Communist Party, visited Tibet - the first senior official to do since the invasion. Alarmed by the extent of the destruction he saw there, he called for a series of drastic reforms and for a policy of "recuperation". His forced resignation in 1987 was said partially to result from his views on Tibet. In 1981, Alexander Solzhenytsin still described the Chinese regime in Tibet as "more brutal and inhumane than any other communist regime in the world." Relexation of China's policies in Tibet came very slowly after 1979 and remains severely limited.
Attempted Tibet-China Dialogue
Two delegations were sent by the Dalai Lama to hold high-level exploratory talks with the Chinese government and party leaders in Beijing between 1979 and 1984. The talks were unsuccessful because the Chinese were, at the time, not prepared to discuss anything of substance except the return of the Dalai Lama from exile. The Dalai Lama has always insisted that his return is not the issue; instead, the question that needs to be addressed is the future of the six million Tibetans inside Tibet. It is the Dalai Lama's opinion that his own return will depend entirely upon resolving the question of the status and the rights of Tibet and its people.
Alarming Chinese Influx
In recent years the situation in Tibet has once again deteriorated, leading in 1987 to open demonstrations against Chinese rule in Lhasa and other parts of the country. One of the principle factors leading to this deterioration has been the large influx of Chinese into Tibet, particularly into its major towns. The exact number of Chinese is difficult to assess, because the vast majority have moved without obtaining official residence permits to do so. Thus, Chinese statistics are entirely misleading, couting as they do only the small numbers of registereed immigratns. In Tibet's citiies andfertile valleys, particularly in eastern Tibet, Chinesew outnumber Tibetans by two and sometimes three to one. In certain rural areas, particularly in western Tibet, there are very few Chineses. Regardless of the figures, the overall impaact of the influx is devastating because the Chineses not only control the political and military power in Tibet, but also the economic life and even cultural and religious life of the people.
The Chinese military as well as the civilian build up in Tibet has been a source of great concern to India, as it impacts directly on India's security. Tibet acted for centuries as a vital buffer between China and India. It is only when Chinese troops faced Indian troops on the Indo-Tibetan border that tensions, and even war, developed between the worlds' most populous powers. The more Tibet is converted into a Chinese province, populated by Chinese, the stronger China's strategic position along the Himalayas will be. China's growing military reach has no become a source of concern to many Asian nations as well as to India.
The Dalai Lama's Proposals
In 1987 the Dalai Lama proposed a Five-Point Peace Plan for the restoration of peace and human rights in Tibet. The plan called for:
1. Transformation of the whole of Tibet into a zone of Ahimsa, demilitarized zone of peace and non-violence.
2. Abandonment of China's population transfer policy, which threatened the very existence of the Tibetans as a people.
3. Respect for the Tibetans people's fundamental human rights and democratic freedoms;
4. Restoration of and protection of Tibet's natural environment and abandonment of China's use of Tibet for the production of nuclear weapons and dumping of nuclear waste;
5. Commencement of earnest negotiations on the future status of Tibet and of relations between the Tibetan and Chinese people.
In 1988 the Dalai Lama elaborated on the fifth point, proposing a concrete framework of negotiations. Tibet, he suggested, should become fully self-governing under a deomcratically elected government. China could maintain responsibility for the overall foreign poicy of Tibet, and until such time as the Tibetan zone of Ahimsa is set up, following a regional converence on peace, China would also be permitted to maintain a restricted number of troops in Tibet for defensive purposes only.
These proposals were well recieved internationally, although the Chinese rejected them. At least, until the June 1989 crackdown on China's democracy movement, however, the Chinese indicated a willingness to talk in its communications with the Tibetan government in exile. This willingness was, it is not believed, in large part due to international pressure on China to negotiated with the Dalai Lama. Once again, communications between Beijing and the Tibetan government in exile has opened up but nothing substantive has resulted.
In August of 1993, two Tibetan representatives traveled to discuss the possibility of substantive negotiations. However, no major advances were made. Instaed the Chinese only reterated their empty statement that they are willing to discuss anything other then independence, while at the same time refusing to respond to any such initiativies by the Dalai Lama. Current Situation.
Today the situation in Tibet is increasingly tense. The influx of Chinese increases; peaceful demonstrations in Lhasa and elsewhere take place despite the strong and often violent reaction of Chinese security forces. Thousands of Tibetand are imprsioned for the political or religious activities; toruture is carried out regularly on detainees; Tibetans are rearely permitted to leave the country and access to Tibet by exiled Tibetans is limited. China has just opened Tibet to tourism, both individual and group, and to wider econonmic develpoment. The "economic miracle" of China does not apply to TIbet, however, since the only community that is benefitting from economic incentives is the Chinese community. Indeed, the Chinese authorities are so worried that Tibetan political activity might disrupt business and public relations that repression in the major towns - and at the major monasteries - is very tight.
In recent years, and especially since the award to the Dalia Lama of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989, the concern shown by governments in europe and the America, in particular, has grown considerably. A number of parliamentary bodies have passed resolutions condeming human rights violations in Tibet and calling for a peaceful resolution of the conflict in accordance with the Dalai Lama's plan. Heads of state, foreign ministers and other political leaders have received the Dalai Lama and his representatives and have shown a desire to be of assistance in promoting a peaceful resolution to the conflict, and thereby contributing to greater peace in the entire region. However, pressure tactics by China has started efforts to make substantive headway to resolve the issue, and Tibet has continued to pay a terrible price for the failure of the world community to seriously challenge China on its behaviour there.
How Can You Help?
1. Write or call up your representatives in the Parliament.
2. Organize events and programs in your area supporting Tibet.
3. Write about Tibet to the local and national media. Examples of this is the newspaper.
4. Boycott goods made in China.
5. Become a member of the International Campaign for Tibet.