| Questions
Frequently Asked about Tibetan Issues
Provided by International
Campaign for Tibet
Q: What is the goal of the
Tibet movement?
A: The goal of the Tibet
movement is to achieve a peaceful, negotiated solution to the Chinese occupation
of Tibet which allows for the Dalai Lama to return to a Tibet run by Tibetans.
Q: What is the position of
the U.S. government towards Tibet?
A: The official position
of the U.S. government supports dialogue between the Dalai Lama and Beijing.
The government is also concerned about the "preservation and development
of Tibet's unique religious, cultural, and linguistic heritage and protection
of its people's fundamental human rights."
The U.S. Congress takes a
stronger stand and maintains that Tibet is an occupied country under international
law and the legitimate leader is the Dalai Lama.
Q: Is the Dalai Lama asking
for Independence from China?
A: No. The Dalai Lama has
been seeking genuine autonomy for Tibet. He has always stated that since
Tibet was independent, Tibetans have the right to seek independence. However,
he does not want to argue over Tibet's historical status, but wants to
base negotiations on a forward-looking solution involving genuine autonomy.
Genuine autonomy would mean that Tibetans have full control of governing
their affairs-not unlike the status of Hong Kong today, or what China has
offered Taiwan. The basis for the Dalai Lama's push for negotiations and
autonomy is laid out in tow documents: the Five Point Peace Plan (1987)
and Strasbourg Statement (1988).
Q: Haven't the Chinese improved
conditions in Tibet?
A: Some conditions have been
improved, however Chinese investments in Tibet go mainly to the newly arrived
Chinese immigrants who currently outnumber Tibetans in all larger towns
and cities.
Q: Wasn't Tibet a brutal
serfdom before the Chinese arrived?
A: A form of serfdom did
exist in Tibet, however it was not nearly as brutal as Chinese propaganda
makes it out to have been. Several travelers to Tibet in the 1940's reported
that the level of economic exploitation was not dissimilar to many Asian
societies at that time, and better than some.
Q: Are Tibetans still fleeing
into exile?
A: Since 1991 over 20,000
Tibetans have fled into India and Nepal. They have been helped by the United
Nations High Commissioner on Refugees, as well as by humanitarian aid from
the U.S. government. Still, they often subsist under dire circumstances.
Over a third of them are monks and nuns, many of whom have been expelled
from monasteries and nunneries or barred from entering them. Half of the
refugees are under 25 years of age.
Q: How many Tibetans have
perished as a direct result of the Chinese occupation?
A: The Tibetan government
in Exile estimates that 1.2 million Tibetans have died since the 1949 invasion
-- this includes from famine, torture, labor camps, pitched battles and
other causes.
Q: What are the major problems
in Tibet?
A: The major problems in
Tibet are continued brutality and oppression, religious persecution, human
rights abuses, the massive influx of Chinese immigrants and the elimination
of basic freedoms including speech, religion, cultural expression and self-determination. |