Telegraph.co.uk
05 Oct 2009

Barack Obama cancels meeting with Dalai Lama 'to keep China happy'

President Barack Obama has refused to meet the Dalai Lama in Washington this 
week in a move to curry favour with the Chinese.

By Alex Spillius in Washington

The decision came after China stepped up a campaign urging nations to shun the 
Tibetan spiritual leader.

It means Mr Obama will become the first president not to welcome the Nobel 
peace prize winner to the White House since the Dalai Lama began visiting 
Washington in 1991. 

The Buddhist monk arrived in Washington on Monday for a week of meetings with 
Congressional leaders, celebrity supporters and interest groups, but the 
president will not see him until after he has made his first visit to China 
next month.

Samdhong Rinpoche, the Tibetan prime minister-in-exile, has accused the United 
States and other Western nations of "appeasement" toward China as its economic 
weight grows.

"Today, economic interests are much greater than other interests," he said.

Mr Obama's decision dismayed human rights and Tibetan support groups, who said 
he had made an unnecessary concession to the Chinese, who regard the Dalai Lama 
as a "splittist", despite his calls for autonomy rather than independence for 
Tibet. The Chinese invaded in 1950, forcing the young leader to flee.

Sophie Richardson, Asia advocate for Human Rights Watch, said: "Presidents 
always meets the Dalai Lama and what happens? Absolutely nothing.

"This idea that if you are nice to the Chinese Communist Party up front you can 
cash in later is just wrong. If you lower the bar on human rights they will 
just move it lower and lower." 

Over several months of discussions the Tibetans resisted entreaties to delay 
the meeting, arguing that a refusal would make smaller countries more 
vulnerable to pressure from China not to meet the Dalai Lama.

But they were told by US officials they wanted to work with China on critical 
issues, including nuclear weapons proliferation in North Korea and Iran, 
according to The Washington Post. Mr Obama then sent a delegation to the Dalai 
Lama's home in exile in India last month that confirmed the meeting would be 
deferred.

Mr Obama has changed his position on Tibet since his election campaign.

In April 2008, he was joined by Hillary Clinton, then his rival for the 
Democratic nomination and now his Secretary of State, in calling on George W 
Bush to boycott the Beijing Olympics opening ceremony in protest at the bloody 
repression of a popular uprising in Tibet.

"If the Chinese do not take steps to help stop the genocide in Darfur and to 
respect the dignity, security, and human rights of the Tibetan people, then the 
President should boycott the opening ceremonies," they said.

Mrs Clinton has been at the forefront of a new approach, called "strategic 
reassurance", which seeks a more amicable partnership with the emerging power.

On her first trip to China in February she said public pressure on China over 
human rights was ill-advised as she "knew what the Chinese were going to say".

Lodi Gyaltsen Gyari, the Washington-based special envoy to the Dalai Lama, 
issued a brief statement, saying: "We came to this arrangement because we 
believe that it is in our long-term interests."

A White House official said the administration and the Tibetans had "agreed the 
timing would be best after the visit".

"Both sides attach importance to a strong US-China relationship," the official 
said. "There are benefits in that to our goals for Tibet, as we have been 
working to resume discussions between the Chinese government and the Dalai 
Lama’s representatives.”

The Tibetan leader's ten meetings with US presidents have played an important 
role in maintaining his international profile, even though they have never been 
filmed or followed by a press conference.

The exception was 2007, when George W Bush conferred the Congressional Gold 
Medal, Congress's highest civilian award, on the Dalai Lama in front of the 
cameras.

Frank Wolf, a Republican congressman and outspoken critic of China's human 
rights record, said: "What would a Buddhist monk or Buddhist nun in Drapchi 
prison think when he heard that President Obama, the president of the United 
States, is not going to meet with the Dalai Lama?

"It's against the law to even have a picture of the Dalai Lama. I can almost 
hear the words of the Chinese guards saying to them that nobody cares about you 
in the United States."

Ms Richardson said treating human rights as separate from other issues 
guaranteed failure "across the board".

"If there is no explicit agreement to stop locking up environmental activists 
and whistle blowers then any environmental agreement will be weakened.

"If the press in China is muzzled it won't investigate industrial safety and 
you will have more toxic toys coming to the United States," she said.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/barackobama/6262938/Barack-Obama-cancels-meeting-with-Dalai-Lama-to-keep-China-happy.html


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