The Asian Age

Dalai Lama says Doklam ‘not very serious’, invokes ‘Hindi-Chini Bhai Bhai’

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT with agency inputs

Describing the ongoing Doklam standoff as “not very serious”, Tibetan supreme spiritual leader the Dalai Lama on Wednesday invoked the famous “Hindi, Chini Bhai-Bhai”, a well-known catch phrase that defined Sino- India ties in the 1950s, stressing that the two neighbours have to live side by side in peace.

Asserting that any problem has to be resolved through talks, the 81-yearold said the theme of 21st century should be dialogue. “That’s the only away. One side’s retreat and defeat is an old-time thinking. In modern times, every country is We need to make distinctio­n between people and government­s... India and China have to live side by side

— Dalai Lama, Spiritual leader

dependent on each other,” the Dalai Lama was quoted by news agencies, while speaking at the Rajendra Mathur Memorial Lecture organised by Editors Guild of India in New Delhi.

The spiritual leader, who calls himself a “chela” of India, also needled China saying he could do more in India which had freedom. “Where there is no freedom, I don’t like.”

“There is some tension, but I do not think it is very serious. We need to make distinctio­n between people and government­s. The other day, I said that Hindi Chini Bhai Bhai is the only way. India and China have to live side by side,” the Dalai Lama said, adding, “propaganda and wrong informatio­n complicate things.”

The Dalai Lama, who had fled a Chinese crackdown in Lhasa and took shelter in India in 1959, said occasional­ly the two neighbours used “harsh words” and recalled that the Chinese forces had finally withdrawn though they had reached Bomdila in 1962.

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