Global Times

Worship waning

More countries shun Dalai Lama a Chinas economic impact grows

- By Zhang Yu

“The more powerful China is the smaller the space for the Dalai Lama is in the internatio­nal community Most countries handle theie diplomatic policies according to their national interest. If they found out inviting the Dalai Lama infringers on their national interest, they would stop inviting him." Wang Xiaobin a scholar with the China Tibetology Research Center

The Dalai Lama’s recent cancellati­on of his Botswana trip has sparked speculatio­n

China has taken tough measures toward countries that invite him to visit

Experts say the Dalai Lama’s internatio­nal value depends on Western countries’ strategic needs

The weeks of tension that followed Botswana’s approval of a visit from the Dalai Lama, despite Chinese objections, came to an unexpected end last Friday.

On August 11, four days before the trip was scheduled to begin, the Dalai Lama’s offi cial website said the Tibetan political exile had to cancel his trip due to health reasons.

The sudden cancellati­on sparked an avalanche of speculatio­n, with some guessing that Chinese government pressure had been the actual cause of the cancellati­on.

Believing that Tibetan issues are a matter of internal Chinese aff airs, China has long taken a tough stance toward countries that invite the Dalai Lama or approve his visits.

Experts say no matter what the real reason for the sudden change of plans, as time goes on it will be increasing­ly diffi - cult for the Dalai Lama to travel internatio­nally as his political infl uence is on the wane.

Sudden cancellati­on

The Dalai Lama had been expected to visit Botswana’s capital Gaborone from August 15 to 20 to address a human rights conference and meet the country’s president despite China’s objections, Reuters reported.

The trip would have been his fi rst visit to Africa, after he was repeatedly denied a visa to South Africa in the past.

However, on August 11, the Dalai Lama’s offi cial website posted a notice, saying he had cancelled his trip due to health reasons. “[ H] is 82- year- old body was telling him to rest,” the notice read.

The notice also said that the Dalai Lama found that carrying out his activities has left him unusually tired, and his physicians have “also advised him to avoid undertakin­g long journeys for the next few weeks.”

However, he is still scheduled to visit Europe from September 10 to 25 to attend a series of events including public talks and conference­s, according to the website, and there has been no indication that these events will be cancelled or postponed due to his “exhaustion.”

Many have speculated that China’s objections and warnings toward Botswana were the deciding factor. Lian Xiangmin, an expert at the China Tibetology Research Center, said, “I don’t know the actual circumstan­ces, but I would say it’s very probable that Botswana is taking into account its relations with China. After all, compared with China, the Dalai Lama is trivial.”

Wang Xiaobin, another scholar with the China Tibetology Research Center, says that the post on the Dalai Lama’s website may have been a face- saving move. “Health conditions may have been an excuse that the Dalai Lama used to give himself an out,” he told the Global Times.

China and Botswana signed a trade agreement in 1986 to facilitate bilateral trade. According to China’s foreign ministry, in 2016, the total trade volume between China and Botswana was $ 271 million. By the end of 2016, Chinese manufactur­ers had signed labor contracts totaling $ 9.91 million in Botswana. China has also been off ering medical aid to the country.

Diff erent approach?

China uses tough measures against countries which allow the Dalai Lama to visit, including temporaril­y cutting off trade or aid, in addition to talks through diplomatic channels.

Last November, after Mongolia approved the Dalai Lama’s visit to the country, China launched a series of sanction- like countermea­sures, including indefi nitely postponing two inter- government­al meetings at which Chinese loans to Mongolia were to have been discussed.

Bilateral relations between China and Mongolia stalled until December, after Mongolia, a country with a long Buddhist tradition, made a public apology saying it deeply regretted allowing the Dalai Lama to visit, and promised not to invite him again.

But China seems to have taken a diff erent approach toward Botswana. Although China’s foreign ministry repeatedly warned the country, on July 24, more than a week after the visit was offi cially announced, China fi nalized a

one- million dollar fl ood relief donation to Botswana to counter the eff ects of cyclone Dineo which hit the country in February, the Xinhua News Agency reported. The signing ceremony, in Gaborone, was attended by the Chinese Ambassador to Botswana Zhao Yanbo and the country’s minister of fi nance and economic developmen­t, Kenneth Matambo.

“It is worth noting that whether China is poor or rich, whether Botswana is poor or rich, China never stopped its assistance to its Batswana friends,” Zhao said at the signing ceremony, according to website of the Chinese embassy in Botswana.

He also said China and Botswana have been working on the constructi­on of two primary schools funded by Chinese grants and that China will send an expert team to Botswana to explore the feasibilit­y of water transfer projects.

According to Mmegi, a national Eng- lish- language newspaper in Botswana, Chinese offi cials have also been holding one- on- one meetings with members of the parliament and traditiona­l leaders this July.

Responding to the Global Times’ question as to whether the cancellati­on of the trip had anything to do with China’s pressure on Botswana, Hua Chunying, spokespers­on for China’s foreign ministry, said “The Chinese side values the developmen­t of friendly and cooperativ­e relations with Botswana and hopes the relations between the two countries can continue to develop in a positive and steady way.”

Hua also said that China has always been, and remains, fi rmly opposed to the Dalai Lama visiting any country to engage in activities aimed at splitting China.

Previously, President Ian Khama’s decision to accept the Dalai Lama’s visit to Botswana also received criticism from his own country. Duma Boko, president of the Botswana National Front, the main opposition party in Botswana, accused Khama of being “reckless and amateurish” in his handling of Dalai’s visit.

“[ T] he country now totters on the brink of a wholesale severing of ties by the People’s Republic of China … The ( current) views represent the whims of the President and his henchmen,” he was quoted as saying by Mmegi.

Waning infl uence

It has been increasing­ly diffi cult for the Dalai Lama to visit foreign countries in recent years, as his internatio­nal infl uence has been waning and China has stepped up eff orts to prevent his visits.

“As China started to take countermea­sures to the countries that accepted his visit, not many countries today truly welcome his visit. He has become a troublemak­er to the countries that wish to establish a friendly relationsh­ip with China,” Lian said.

Political relations are of huge importance for trade with China. In 2008, after then French President Nicholas Sarkozy met the Dalai Lama in Poland, China cancelled the 11th annual China- EU summit, resulting in losses to EU trade. In 2011, South Africa refused to give the Dalai Lama a visa, likely due to the fact that China is Africa’s biggest trading partner. Countries including Germany and Norway have all shunned the Dalai Lama in recent years.

A 2013 research paper by Andreas Fuchs of Heidelberg University’s AlfredWebe­r- Institute for Economics which looked at global trade statistics from 2002 to 2008, found that a meeting between a head of state and the Dalai Lama lead to a reduction of exports to China by 16.9 percent on average; the Dalai Lama meeting with a government member decreased exports to China by 12.5 percent on average.

“The more powerful China is, the smaller the space for the Dalai Lama is in the internatio­nal community. Most countries handle their diplomatic policies according to their national interest. If they fi nd out inviting the Dalai Lama infringes on their national interest, they would stop inviting him,” Wang said.

Chinese experts say the Dalai Lama’s internatio­nal value depends on Western countries’ strategic needs.

From the period between 1973 to 1978, for example, few countries allowed the Dalai Lama to visit because Western countries wanted to win over China at that time. “It was the Cold War, when the Soviet Union was the biggest foe of the US. The US tried to amend its relations with China so that it could isolate the Soviet Union, which was in line with its interest back then,” Wang said.

The golden era for the Dalai Lama occurred in the decade after 1989. The Dalai Lama was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, and began to frequently visit foreign countries to meet heads of state and religious leaders.

“With the dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union, the Dalai Lama became a tool for Western countries against China,” Lian said.

But as China rose to become the second largest economy in the world, that golden era is gone.

Last year, the Dalai Lama visited nearly a dozen countries including the USA, Belgium, France, Slovakia, Latvia, Switzerlan­d, the Czech Republic, Italy, Japan and Mongolia, invited mostly by universiti­es or private organizati­ons. This year, he is expected to visit several countries in Europe, according to his website.

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 ??  ?? The Potala Palace looms from afar as seen between the golden spears of the Jokhang Temple in Lhasa, the Tibet Autonomous Region.
The Potala Palace looms from afar as seen between the golden spears of the Jokhang Temple in Lhasa, the Tibet Autonomous Region.

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