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Better late than never - McLeod Ganj received its first snow fall of the winter causing some inconvenience to traffic and pedestrians. However, Dharamsala is dependent on snowfall for its water, and snowfall is usually seen as a rescue from summer's water shortage problem. Phayul photo/Phuntsok Chomphel
A worker at a Beijing office checks stories and photos of the Dalai Lama on the Google China search (Google.cn) page. Google has threatened to pull out of China after a series of cyber attacks originating from that nation. This week the company announced it would stop censoring Google.cn and within hours it lifted its own self-censorship policy in China thereby allowing Chinese internet users for the first time to access "taboo" topics like the Dalai Lama, the Tiananmen massacre and the Falun Gong. (Photo: STR / AFP / Getty Images / January 14, 2010)
Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, center, poses for photographs with Chinese and Taiwanese devotees at Mahabodhi temple in Bodh Gaya, about 130 kilometers (81 miles) south of Patna, India, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2010. Bodh Gaya is the town where Prince Siddhartha Gautama attained enlightenment after intense meditation and became the Buddha.The Dalai Lama is delivering a series of lectures here till Jan.9. (AP Photo/Rajesh Kumar Singh)
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Put Tibet Back on the Map
Lodi Gyari: Standing With The Dalai Lama
NPR[Wednesday, July 23, 2008 10:50]
"There should be a certain degree of normalcy (in Tibet)," Lodi Gyari, the head of the Tibetan delegation for talks with China, said at an April news conference in New Delhi. (AFP/Getty Images: Manpreet Romana)
"There should be a certain degree of normalcy (in Tibet)," Lodi Gyari, the head of the Tibetan delegation for talks with China, said at an April news conference in New Delhi. (AFP/Getty Images: Manpreet Romana)
July 23 - With the Olympics in Beijing less than a month away, the global spotlight is on China. The host nation's human rights record is under renewed scrutiny, particularly its response to recent unrest in Tibet.

Lodi Gyari is the special envoy of the Dalai Lama, Tibet's exiled spiritual leader.

As the Dalai Lama's chief negotiator, Gyari has twice traveled to meet Communist Party officials in Beijing since this spring's widespread protests in support of Tibet's push for self-rule. Those protests, which centered on the Olympic torch's trip to Beijing, also set off counter-demonstrations in China and elsewhere.

Despite that unrest, Gyari told Steve Inskeep, "China sometimes takes the position that, 'Oh, there's no problem in Tibet. Everything's fine. Tibetans are very grateful, there's prosperity, there's this, there's that.'"

And when rallies and demonstrations break out, Gyari said, China's communist government treats them as threats to law and order, often leading to a crackdown.

"This is not going to resolve the issue," Gyari says he told Chinese negotiators at a recent meeting. "The more you suppress, the more [there is] resentment."

Instead, he urged them to accept the Dalai Lama's offer of cooperation with China's leaders.

"We can provide them legitimacy," Gyari said. "But if โ€” and only if โ€” Tibetans are given the opportunity to live in dignity."

Gyari, who was born in Tibet, fled China's takeover of his country when he was a boy in 1959 โ€” the same year the Dali Lama fled Tibet.

"I remember walking to India with only one shoe," Gyari said, "because somewhere on the road I was too exhausted and my one foot got stuck in the mud and when I pulled my leg it came back without a shoe."

The Dalai Lama has said that he is not seeking separation and independence of Tibet. But the Chinese government's unease over more protests led it to demand that the Dalai Lama repudiate any efforts to disrupt the Olympics.

Gyari said the Dalai Lama has done just that.

"Because the Olympics, we certainly believe, is important for the Chinese as a people," Gyari said.

The two sides have agreed to meet again after the summer Olympics.

"This is the great opportunity for [China] to prove" itself, Gyari said. "To prove, one, that China does things by herself, not because of international pressure; two, that they're serious, and they were not doing all these talks for the sake of the Olympics."

Gyari also cited the chance for the Dalai Lama and Chinese President Hu Jintao to prove that they are serious about a mediated solution.

"I think the October meeting is very important," he said.
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