Taiwanese representatives of Tibetans and the Dalai Lama have expressed hope for a strengthened relationship with the nation to counter China’s influence.
Taiwan plays an critical role as a “window to the Chinese-speaking world,” Tibet Religious Foundation of His Holiness the Dalai Lama chairman Dawa Tsering and Taiwan Tibetan Welfare Association chairman Tashi Tsering told the Chinese-language Liberty Times (sister paper of the Taipei Times).
Tibetans should work with Taiwan to get their message about countering China, which lies about the true state of affairs in Tibet, to Chinese speakers and the rest of the world, they said.
Photo: CNA
Taiwan should promote cultural exchanges with Tibetans in exile to further improve understanding between the two, they added.
“The truth is a sharp weapon,” Dawa said.
The Dalai Lama believes that the most peaceful way to solve Tibet’s troubles is by following the “middle way” — a Buddhist teaching that advises acting in moderation, avoiding extremes, Dawa said, adding that spreading the truth about Tibet to all Chinese speakers is the best way to accomplish this.
Beijing tells the world that it “liberated” Tibet, when in truth it was an invasion, Dawa said.
Tibet’s religion, culture and environment were all colonized by the Chinese, he added.
Beijing can only continue its occupation of Tibet at great cost, by suppressing dissent through the use of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army and paramilitary forces, Dawa said.
“Without force, the communists could not keep control of Tibet for even one day,” he said, adding that Beijing keeps Tibet isolated to prevent the truth from getting out.
The Mongolian and Tibetan Cultural Center in Taipei should work with the Tibetan government in exile — at the Dalai Lama’s headquarters in Dharamsala, India — which lacks the resources to conduct cultural exchanges in Taiwan, Dawa said.
A declining number of officials in the exile government are fluent in Chinese, but that would change if second-generation Tibetans could learn Chinese in Taiwan, Tashi said.
All Tibetans would be grateful if that could happen, he added.
Only 15 monks per year are eligible for visas to Taiwan, severely limiting the possibility of exchanges, he said.
Tashi said that Tibet faces its own extinction, a situation that he hopes Taiwan can avoid, adding that freedom, democracy and human rights are values that Taiwanese and Tibetans both hold dear.
Recalling Deng Nan-jung (鄭南榕), a Taiwanese publisher and pro-democracy advocate who died of self-immolation in 1989 to support freedom of speech, Tashi said he hopes that Taiwanese youth can grasp the price that was paid so that Taiwan could have the freedoms and democracy it has today.
A magnitude 6.4 earthquake struck off the coast of Hualien County in eastern Taiwan at 7pm yesterday, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. The epicenter of the temblor was at sea, about 69.9km south of Hualien County Hall, at a depth of 30.9km, it said. There were no immediate reports of damage resulting from the quake. The earthquake’s intensity, which gauges the actual effect of a temblor, was highest in Taitung County’s Changbin Township (長濱), where it measured 5 on Taiwan’s seven-tier intensity scale. The quake also measured an intensity of 4 in Hualien, Nantou, Chiayi, Yunlin, Changhua and Miaoli counties, as well as
Taiwan is to have nine extended holidays next year, led by a nine-day Lunar New Year break, the Cabinet announced yesterday. The nine-day Lunar New Year holiday next year matches the length of this year’s holiday, which featured six extended holidays. The increase in extended holidays is due to the Act on the Implementation of Commemorative and Festival Holidays (紀念日及節日實施條例), which was passed early last month with support from the opposition Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Taiwan People’s Party. Under the new act, the day before Lunar New Year’s Eve is also a national holiday, and Labor Day would no longer be limited
COMMITMENTS: The company had a relatively low renewable ratio at 56 percent and did not have any goal to achieve 100 percent renewable energy, the report said Pegatron Corp ranked the lowest among five major final assembly suppliers in progressing toward Apple Inc’s commitment to be 100 percent carbon neutral by 2030, a Greenpeace East Asia report said yesterday. While Apple has set the goal of using 100 percent renewable energy across its entire business, supply chain and product lifecycle by 2030, carbon emissions from electronics manufacturing are rising globally due to increased energy consumption, it said. Given that carbon emissions from its supply chain accounted for more than half of its total emissions last year, Greenpeace East Asia evaluated the green transition performance of Apple’s five largest final
The first tropical storm of the year in the western North Pacific, Wutip (蝴蝶), has formed over the South China Sea and is expected to move toward Hainan Island off southern China, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said today. The agency said a tropical depression over waters near the Paracel and Zhongsha islands strengthened into a tropical storm this morning. The storm had maximum sustained winds near its center of 64.8kph, with peak gusts reaching 90kph, it said. Winds at Beaufort scale level 7 — ranging from 50kph to 61.5kph — extended up to 80km from the center, it added. Forecaster Kuan Hsin-ping