Global Times

Xizang celebrates 65 yrs of democratic reform

▶ ‘It’s a great feat,’ claim locals and experts, slamming Western smears

- By Fan Anqi

People across Southwest China’s Xizang Autonomous Region have engaged in various celebratio­n activities to mark the 65th anniversar­y of practicing democratic reform in Xizang, which falls on Thursday. From autocracy to democracy, from poverty to prosperity, and from alienation to freedom, the process of reform has been hailed by local residents as an epoch-making event in the advancemen­t of human rights.

Observers also denounced Western attacks over so-called human rights violations and forced assimilati­on of culture, noting that they are nothing but fabricated lies out of thin air. A tour of the region will be more than enough to showcase the harmony and unity among various ethnic groups in Xizang, as well as the unremittin­g efforts of the government to protect and develop local Tibetan culture, they said.

Lhasa, the capital of Xizang, is gearing up for various activities to celebrate this day, including book-sharing seminars and a thousand-person choral competitio­n. Tibet University, a prestigiou­s school in the region located in Lhasa, held a special lecture highlighti­ng the rapid developmen­t of Xizang over the past 65 years.

“It’s a great feat. Xizang’s democratic reform is the most important abolition movement of serfdom in modern world history,” Jia Chunyang, executive director of the Economic and Social Security Research Center at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Since the abolition of serfdom, local residents in Xizang have been granted a wide range of political rights, including the right to self-govern their own ethnic and regional affairs, the right to vote and be elected, and the right to informatio­n. Currently, Xizang has 24 deputies to the 14th National People’s Congress, with Tibetan and other ethnic minority deputies accounting for 66.7 percent of the delegation, data showed.

However, the Western media have ramped up efforts to throw mud at Xizang’s human rights issues as well as forced assimilati­on in boarding schools, which Jia slammed with powerful evidence he obtained from the local people.

Jia, who had just shared these figures at a seminar on the sideline of the 55th session of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, pointed out that boarding schools are favored by local children and parents because many of their homes are far away from schools, and that the conditions of boarding schools are better.

On-site research conducted by Jia and his team revealed that these boarding schools not only do not restrict or suppress the learning of Tibetan language, but instead attach great importance to the protection and developmen­t of it by encouragin­g Tibetan students to use their mother tongue in daily life.

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