Theocracy has lost its root in Tibet -experts

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-04-11 20:57

At a ritual in India in January 2007, he again ordered people not to worship Dorjee Shugden, denounced its believers as spies of the Chinese government and asked his followers to make black-or-white decision between him and Dorjee Shugden.

A herdsman's left foot was chopped by the head of his tribe. Documents at the Archives of the Nationalities Cultural Palace in Beijing shows that a feudal-serfdom institution existed in Tibet before the democratic reform in 1959 was more brutal than the system of medieval Europe. [File Photo] Brutal Past
After this statement, statues of the deity were damaged in some temples in Tibet and other Tibetan-inhabited regions.

Observers said the Dalai Lama was using religion to suppress his political rivals and achieve political targets.

While Tibetan people were working hard to improve their hometowns, the Dalai Lama and his supporters harassed the Chinese border with foreign anti-China forces in the 1960s and fanned violent incidents in the 1980s. Last month, the violence claimed 19 innocent lives in Lhasa.

"Tibet is not paradise. It faces challenges and difficulties during its development," said Bi Hua, a CTRC expert. "But people know who are showing the real sense of responsibility to Tibet."

"Tibet has made great progress in the past decades," added 60-something Tenzin Ganpa, another CTRC senior researcher and a native of Lhasa.

Common people are provided with improving public services in education, health care, pension and housing while enjoying a higher living standard, he said.

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