/ 12 June 2007

Dalai Lama warns against China containment

The Dalai Lama warned nations on Tuesday not to try to contain China’s economic and military emergence, but urged countries like Australia to use their trading clout to pressure Beijing on human rights.

The exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, speaking in Canberra, said he shared concerns about growing strategic and trade ties between the United States, India, Japan and Australia, which Beijing has interpreted as moves towards encirclement.

”It is absolutely wrong to isolate China and also contain China. It’s wrong, morally also wrong,” the Dalai Lama told the Australian National Press Club.

”China must be brought into the mainstream of the world community, and now fortunately China themselves want to join the world community. Most welcome. Very good.

”However … while you are making good relations, genuine friendship with China, certain principles such as human rights and also democracy, rule of law, free press, these things you should stand firm. That means you are a true friend of China.”

The US, Japan and Australia have said their growing defence ties are not aimed at containing China.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard and pro-China opposition leader Kevin Rudd said on Tuesday they would ignore pressure from Beijing’s Canberra embassy not to meet the visiting Tibetan Buddhist leader, despite vague warnings of repercussions.

After weeks of diary searching Howard found he could make time to meet the Dalai Lama on Friday in Sydney. Labour Party leader Kevin Rudd, a Mandarin-speaking former diplomat, went back on an earlier refusal and said he would meet him in his office at Parliament House.

China has overtaken Japan as Australia’s biggest trading partner, although Canberra’s strategic interests are closely allied with those of Washington.

Australia’s statistics office said last month that the nation’s trade with China had hit Aus$52,7-billion ($44,3-billion) in the year to March, slightly surpassing bilateral exchanges with Japan as energy-hungry China’s demand for Australian resources continued.

The Dalai Lama, whom Beijing considers a separatist, admitted China’s fast-growing world influence was hampering his access to some world leaders to press demands for greater autonomy, not independence, for his predominantly Buddhist homeland.

But support for an autonomous Tibet was growing in the US and some small European nations, he said, although some nations were understandably reluctant to cross China.

”I think the more serious concern, I think the public sympathy, public concern, it seems like it’s increasing,” the Dalai Lama said, adding that he was unconcerned if he did not secure a meeting with Howard.

”In my mind it’s not that serious, but in their mind it seems very, very serious,” he said.

The Dalai Lama, winner of the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize, fled into exile in India in 1959 after a failed uprising against Communist rule. – Reuters