New Straits Times

DALAI LAMA

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‘People who commit sexual abuse don’t care about the Buddha’s teaching. So now that everything has been made public, people may concern about their shame.’

THE HAGUE: The Dalai Lama said on Saturday that he has known about sexual abuse by Buddhist teachers since the 1990s and that such allegation­s are “nothing new”.

The Tibetan spiritual leader, revered by millions of Buddhists around the world, made the admission during a four-day visit to the Netherland­s, where he met Friday victims of sexual abuse allegedly committed by Buddhist teachers.

He was responding to a call from a dozen of the victims who had launched a petition asking to meet him during his trip, part of a tour of Europe.

“We found refuge in Buddhism with an open mind and heart, until we were raped in its name,” the victims said in their petition.

“I already did know these things, nothing new,” the Dalai Lama said in response on Dutch public television NOS on Saturday.

“Twenty-five years ago... someone mentioned about a problem of sexual allegation­s” at a conference for western Buddhist teachers in Dharamshal­a, a hill town in northern India, he added.

The Dalai Lama, 83, lives in exile in Dharamshal­a.

“People who commit sexual abuse don’t care about the Buddha’s teaching. So now that everything has been made public, people may concern about their shame,” he said, speaking in English.

Tseten Samdup Chhoekyapa, a representa­tive of the Tibetan spiritual leader in Europe, said on Friday that the Dalai Lama “has consistent­ly denounced such irresponsi­ble and unethical behaviour”.

Tibetan spiritual leaders are due to meet in Dharamshal­a in November.

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