Say NO to Theocracy - Mullah's, Lama's, Rabbi's, Pundit's or Pope's!!

"I read an archived letter by a Tibetan nobleman to another nobleman. It read 
something like this: 'We gambled the other day and I lost three serfs, seven 
horses and 20 silver coins to you. I'm sending them over today'," Sitar said, 
speaking in impeccable Chinese. He also speaks Tibetan, English and German.

http://www.expressindia.com/latest-news/Once-a-serf-Sitar-represents-the-other-side-of-Tibet/300607/

Beijing, April 23:  For many fellow Tibetans, Sitar is a Chinese government 
puppet, but for the Communist Party, the former serf is a model of loyalty and 
rising political star. Sitar, who goes by one name and whose ancestors were 
serfs for generations until 1959, has risen to be a vice-minister of the 
Party's United Front Work Department and a key defender of government policy in 
Tibet. 
He has emerged as one of the most prominent ethnic Tibetans backing China's 
fight against Tibet's spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, and his 
government-in-exile based in northern India. 
In that role, Sitar has come to embody the divide between a Tibetan political 
elite that has embraced China's programme for controlling and developing the 
region, and discontented Tibetans and exiles who instead see exploitation and 
repression. 
China blames the Dalai Lama "clique" for last month's deadly rioting in Lhasa 
and anti-China protests, which have dogged the international torch relay for 
the Beijing Olympics. 
"It was the Party who nurtured me. I'm absolutely loyal to the Party and the 
motherland. This is firm and unshakeable," an official document quoted Sitar, 
who turned down two Reuters interview requests, as saying. 
"He has bathed in the Party's sunlight since childhood," the document said of 
Sitar, named one of the Party's 50 outstanding members in 2006. 
In launching a campaign to learn from Sitar that year, then Minister of United 
Front Liu Yandong praised him for rejecting overtures from the 
government-in-exile to defect when he was a diplomat at the Chinese consulate 
in Zurich in the late 1980s. 
Liu held up "comrade Sitar as a model ... politically firm, loyal to the Party 
and dares to shoulder heavy responsibilities". 
A source with ties to the government-in-exile confirmed it had tried to lure 
Sitar to defect. 
FOILED ATTACK PLAN 
Sitar is also credited with obtaining intelligence that helped foil a plan by 
radical exiled Tibetans to attack the consulate in Zurich in 1989, according to 
the document. 
During his eight-year stint in the Swiss city, Sitar scored a modest victory 
over the government-in-exile by arranging for some homesick exiled Tibetans to 
return home, the report said. 
He also took the floor at a U.N. conference in South Africa in 2001 to rebut 
accusations that Tibetans had no human rights. 
At a news conference this month, Sitar likened serfs to livestock and currency 
under the Dalai Lama's rule. 
"I read an archived letter by a Tibetan nobleman to another nobleman. It read 
something like this: 'We gambled the other day and I lost three serfs, seven 
horses and 20 silver coins to you. I'm sending them over today'," Sitar said, 
speaking in impeccable Chinese. He also speaks Tibetan, English and German. 
Sitar was born in 1953 in Dege county, famous for printing Tibetan Buddhist 
scriptures, in the southwestern province of Sichuan, a gateway to the Himalayan 
region. 
After graduating from a teachers' college in 1968, Sitar taught briefly at a 
primary school and later at the Central University for Nationalities. He joined 
the United Front Department in 1984 and has a master's degree in philosophy. 
The United Front Department is the Party's arm for courting and controlling 
non-Party forces, including intellectuals, ethnic minorities, religious groups 
and Taiwan and Hong Kong people. 
Addressing the opening of a Beijing exhibit of 1,000 traditional thangka 
paintings of the legendary Tibetan hero Gesser in 2004, Sitar said the art was 
a "heavy slap in the face" for the Dalai Lama who had spoken of "cultural 
genocide". 
Sitar is a rising political star, but Tibetans can rise only so far. No Tibetan 
has ever served as the top official in the predominantly Buddhist region. 
Last year the Party questioned the loyalty of Tibetan members, accusing many of 
swearing their true allegiance to the Dalai Lama, New York-based Tibetologist 
Robbie Barnett has said quoting an internal memo. 
China says about one million serfs were emancipated when troops marched into 
the region in 1950. It is unclear how many former serfs joined the government 
because China has sought to play down their background to avoid hurting their 
pride. 
The most senior former serf is Raidi, who retired in March as a vice-chairman 
of parliament. For hawks like Raidi, there is little to be gained from 
rapprochement with the Dalai Lama. 
"Raidi derailed the sixth round of talks" between China and the Dalai Lama's 
envoys last year, a source with knowledge of the fence-mending negotiations 
said. 
Asked at the news conference to comment on serfdom in old Tibet, Sitar said: 
"Tibetans should protect their own human rights ... and absolutely not let the 
social system in which 95 percent of the people did not have human rights 
return to Tibet."    
  



Umesh Sharma

Washington D.C. 

1-202-215-4328 [Cell]

Ed.M. - International Education Policy
Harvard Graduate School of Education,
Harvard University,
Class of 2005

http://www.uknow.gse.harvard.edu/index.html (Edu info)

http://hbswk.hbs.edu/ (Management Info)




www.gse.harvard.edu/iep  (where the above 2 are used )
http://harvardscience.harvard.edu/



http://jaipurschool.bihu.in/
       
---------------------------------
Sent from Yahoo! Mail.
A Smarter Email.
_______________________________________________
assam mailing list
[email protected]
http://assamnet.org/mailman/listinfo/assam_assamnet.org

Reply via email to