China county bans Tibetan monks educated in India
BEIJING: A county in southwest China’s Sichuan province has banned Tibetan monks “wrongly educated” in India from teaching Buddhism to prevent the spread of separatist ideas.
Litang county officials from Sichuan issued the ban recently in what appears to be the first such move outside the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), nationalistic tabloid Global Times reported.
“As some monks received education overseas from the 14th Dalai Lama clique – whom China regards as separatists – it is necessary to tighten supervision so as to prevent the clique from using local Buddhists to conduct separatist activities,” Zhu Weiqun, former head of the Ethnic and Religious Affairs Committee of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, was quoted as saying.
Beijing considers the Dalai Lama a secessionist engaged in anti-china activities to secure Tibetan independence, a charge he denies. The spiritual leader says he only seeks autonomy for Tibet.
The county conducts patriotic education classes every year for those educated and awarded the Gexe Lharampa – the highest academic degree in Tibetan Buddhist studies – in India, an official from Litang’s ethnic and religious affairs bureau said. “Those who behave improperly at patriotism classes or show any signs of separatist intent are strictly monitored and banned from teaching Buddhism to the public,” the report said.
Gexe means knowledgeable and Lharampa is the highest of four ranks in the Gexe system of Tibetan Buddhism.