A refusal by South Africa to allow the Dalai Lama to take part in activist Desmond Tutu’s 80th birthday next Friday is to please China and a denial of its struggle for democracy, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said.
“The South African government’s reluctance to issue a visa to the Dalai Lama, Tibetans’ spiritual leader, has no objective basis and appears to be based on no more than fear of Chinese government displeasure,” the group said in a statement.
South Africa has refused to announce its decision on the Dalai Lama’s visa. He was invited by Tutu to give a peace lecture as part of events to celebrate his birthday on Friday.
Pretoria barred the Dalai Lama in 2009 over fears of jeopardizing ties with China, which is the country’s main national trade partner.
“If South Africa refuses a visa to a Nobel Prize recipient and human rights campaigner, with no objective grounds for refusal, then there can only be less-than-noble motivations for its action,” HRW Africa director Daniel Bekele said. “For the government to block a leader who supported South Africa’s struggles is not only to deny its own history, but it raises questions about whether the government looks to Pretoria, or to Beijing, for some of its domestic policy decisions.”
China warns countries that allow the Dalai Lama entry that they risk retribution and South Africa would not be the first country to refuse a visit by the Dalai Lama, but it should make it clear that 2009 was the last time.
“There are few better ways to honor Archbishop Tutu, and that for which he and South Africa stand, than by acting on principle rather than perceived political expediency,” Bekele said.
The government has said that visa procedure has not been followed, which the offices of Tutu and the Dalai Lama have denied and have slammed the government’s response as “profoundly disrespectful.”
China refuses to recognize criticism of its policies in Tibet, HRW said.
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