Hindustan Times (Delhi)

‘India will face consequenc­es if it assists Dalai’

- Sutirtho Patranobis spatranobi­s@hindustant­imes.com

INDIANUS CHANCELLOR OF SAN DIEGO UNIVERSITY PRADEEP KHOSLA IS UNDER FIRE FOR INVITING THE DALAI LAMA TO ADDRESS STUDENTS IN JUNE

India will face serious consequenc­es if its overseas citizens meddle in Chinese affairs by courting and promoting Tibetan leader Dalai Lama, a Chinese newspaper has said continuing the recent trend of demonising India in a section of state-controlled media in China.

This time, the nationalis­tic tabloid Global Times — known for its strong views — picked on the Indian American chancellor of the University of California San Diego (UCSD) Pradeep Khosla for inviting the “the exiled spiritual head and leader of the Tibetan people” the Dalai Lama to address students in June.

Apparently, the invitation triggered much anger among Chinese students from the mainland at the university; and in Beijing, it triggered a harshlywor­ded opinion piece, which often lapsed into insults, repeatedly referring to Indians as “these Indians”.

Referring to the invitation extended by the chancellor to the Dalai Lama, the GT article said, “What is laughable is that the person behind the infamous invitation was campus chancellor Pradeep Khosla, an Indian American. The campus website posted a photo of Khosla who met the Dalai Lama in Dharamsala, India, last October. This shows how some Indian Americans agitate China-India and China-US relations”.

The Tibetan leader is considered a separatist by the Communist Party of China-ruled government and has been referred to as “wolf in sheep’s clothing”, inciting separatism and self-immolation­s. Inviting the Tibetan leader for a lecture is apparently the same as trying to divide China, argued Xu Liang from the Indian Studies Centre at the Beijing Internatio­nal Studies University.

Then came the warning: “Since modern times, the Indians have enjoyed unity bestowed by the British. They ramified Pakistan, annexed Sikkim, and exploited geopolitic­al interests from ethnic divisions in Sri Lanka and Nepal. If the Indians indulge in the obsession of intruding on the territoria­l integrity of China, China will not sit still”.

“India is a big country in terms of public diplomacy, but if some overseas Indians make it their business to interfere in the internal affairs of other countries and treading on their sovereignt­y, they will bear the political consequenc­es,” Xu wrote.

“Khosla is imposing his views of the Dalai Lama on the student population at the university and using such an important occasion as commenceme­nt to promote someone who has nothing to do with education,” the author argued.

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