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Showing posts with label Tibet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tibet. Show all posts

Saturday, July 05, 2008

"Tibet Talks Conclude With Conditions," WorldNews.com, July 4, 2008.

[Fractured English accompanied by an understandable eagerness to pump out the Tibetan party line combine to make discerning the factual core of this report difficult--but not impossible, I think. -jlt]

Dharmshala. Special Envoy for the Dalai Lama, Mr. Lodi Gyari and Envoy Mr. Kelsang Gyaltsen ended talks with Chinese government officials Thursday with no immediate reports of substantive progress on easing tensions in Tibet and Tibet issues, something the United States, France, UK and other foreign governments have been strongly urging on China.

A report on the talks in Chinese media contained no concessions to allow more cultural and religious autonomy for Tibet and Tibetan people in the wake of world wide protests this spring.

State media reported the conditions that the Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama would be required to meet before the Chinese would agree to eighth round talks between two sides before the end of the year 2008.

The Dalai Lama must prove that he does not support activities that would disturb next month's Beijing Olympic Games 2008, and agree to "concretely curb" violent activities of groups advocating Tibetan independence.

The two envoys left Beijing on Thursday afternoon. They will brief the media on the latest round of discussions they held with the representatives of the Chinese leadership in Beijing after briefing the Dalai Lama, the Kashag and the Speaker and the Deputy Speaker of the Tibetan Parliament-in-Exile tomorrow morning 5 July 2008, according to an official Tibetan media report.

Some Tibet experts had hoped for signs that the talks were more than a Chinese attempt to take international focus off Tibet until after the Beijing Olympic Games 2008. These experts found only slight shifts.

"After all they are implicitly accusing His Holiness the Dalai Lama of 'supporting' violence instead of directly insisting that he masterminds it," said Thomas???, a Tibet scholar from Austria. "I can't see this going down very well in Tibet or anywhere else."


Based on a report by WorldNet.com.Recommend this Post


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Monday, June 02, 2008

Brendan O'Neill, "Is the Dalai Lama a religous dictator?" spiked, May 20, 2008.

[In May of this year, Brendan O'Neill, editor of spiked published an article on the Dalai Lama's relatively recent attack on the "heresy" of Dorje Shugden worship. -jlt]

[...]

In March 1996, the Dalai Lama decreed that the worship of Dorje Shugden was ‘evil’. In what is believed to have been part of an internal power struggle in his fiefdom-in-exile in Dharamsala, northern India, the Dalai Lama ordered all worshippers of Dorje Shugden to leave his temple on 21 March 1996. A week later, on 30 March 1996, the Assembly of Tibetan People’s Deputies (the parliament in exile) passed a resolution banning the worship of Dorje Shugden by Tibetan government employees, and the Private Office of His Holiness the Dalai Lama issued a formal decree for everyone to stop practising the Dorje Shugden prayer. The New Internationalist reported that the Lama’s office wrote to every monastery in northern India and Tibet demanding that they ‘ensure total implementation of this decree by each and everyone… If there is anyone who continues to worship [Dorje Shugden], make a list of their names, house name, birth place… Keep the original and send us a copy of the list.’ (1)


‘After the Dalai Lama’s decree, anyone who continued to follow Dorje Shugden got it in the neck’, Pema says. By 1998, two years after the Dalai Lama described Dorje Shugden as ‘evil’ and instructed monasteries to collect the names of those disobedient Buddhists who continued worshipping it, an Indian human rights lawyer, PK Dey, had collected 300 statements from Tibetans in exile in India who had been either threatened or attacked for failing to comply with the Dalai Lama’s orders. ‘Those worshipping Shugden are experiencing tremendous harassment’, said Dey. ‘This is not in any particular part of the country but everywhere there are Tibetans.’ (2) In December 1996, one 72-year-old woman, Sonam Bhuti, whose family had worshipped Dorje Shugden for generations, reported to the Office of the Notary in Delhi (a civil law institution) that Tibetan officials had ransacked her and others’ homes, ‘forcibly taking out the idols and paintings [of Dorje Shugden]’ and ‘burning’ and ‘breaking’ them (3).

[...]

Read the whole article here =>
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Thursday, May 29, 2008

M K Bhadrakumar, "Medvedev reaches out to China," Asia Times, May 29, 2008.

Russia realizes that it is only one among many big players seriously engaging China and cannot hope to claim a privileged partnership with it.


Kremlinology is back in vogue. Experts and analysts have come out of the woodwork to run a fine-tooth comb through Kremlin events, searching for clues on the direction of Russian policies under new President Dmitry Medvedev.

Often in the Soviet era, during feverish over-analyses by foreign experts, the obvious would get elbowed out in favor of tantalizing interpretations over men and mice. Could history be repeating itself?

Much has been made of Medvedev's choice of Kazakhstan and China as his first destinations after assuming office from Vladimir Putin on May 7. Was it a deliberate signal to Western capitals? Moscow pooh-poohed the suggestion. A prominent Moscow commentator pointed out, "It would be best to go to the East and West at the same time, but that is impossible."


But the disarming explanation overlooked the fact that Medvedev after all did make a choice in traveling to Beijing via Astana last weekend. Eight years ago, in 2000, when Putin went abroad as Russia's president for the first time, he travelled to London via Belarus. At that time, Moscow let it be known there was rich symbolism in Putin's choice, which was intended to convey that Russia wanted closer ties to the West.

Equally, in May 2003, Chinese President Hu Jintao's first foreign visit took him to Moscow. The government-owned China Daily newspaper aptly commented on the day of Medvedev's arrival in Beijing on Friday: "The first foreign trip of any head of state should be a carefully calculated move. The country he or she visits is supposed to be important to his or her own country's foreign relations. Little wonder that Medvedev's two-day China visit has generated much interest ... Clearly, new leaders of the two countries have put their bilateral relations on top of their foreign policy agenda."


Pragmatic cooperation

The Chinese comment stated the obvious to emphasize the bilateral content of Medvedev's visit. In fact, Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Li Hui told the media at a briefing that Medvedev's visit would have four "goals": one, to establish a "working relationship and personal friendship" at the leadership level; two, to oversee the fulfillment of bilateral cooperation in practical terms; three, to increase political trust and extend mutual support on "issues concerning sovereignty, security and territorial integrity"; and, four, to deepen "pragmatic cooperation".

The fourth "goal" - pragmatic cooperation - captures the quintessence of the so-called strategic partnership between the two countries. China would have no difficulty to know that Russia has been and will remain essentially Western-centric (as distinct from "pro-West"). Over two-thirds of Russia's population live in its European part and the locus of economic and political power lies there.

But that does not detract from Russia's abiding interest in China, which is natural and historical as a neighboring country, and combines pragmatically in the present day with the imperatives of China's phenomenal rise. At the same time, Russia realizes that it is only one among many big players seriously engaging China and cannot hope to claim a privileged partnership with it.

No sooner had Medvedev concluded his two-day China visit on Saturday, South Korea's newly elected "pro-American" President Lee Myung-bak arrived in Beijing on a four-day trip. China followed the United States and Japan in Lee's itinerary. South Korea's trade volume with China is four times that of Russia's.

Read the rest in Asia Times online =>
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Monday, May 19, 2008

Susan Brownell, America's and Japan's Olympic Debuts: Lessons for Beijing 2008 (and the Tibet Controversy), Japan Focus, May 16, 2008.

...it is worth reflecting upon the fact that the Beijing Olympic Games will be the first Olympics to be staged by an Asian nation that is not host to U.S. military bases.

The third modern Olympic Games were held in St. Louis in 1904 alongside the Louisiana Purchase Exposition (world's fair), and while China did not take part in the sports (it would send its first Olympic athlete to the 1932 Los Angeles Games), the Qing dynasty sent the first official delegation that it had ever sent to an international exposition. It was motivated to do so by concerns about the negative national image of China promoted by the unofficial exhibits at previous fairs, such as the opium den exhibit at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. The 1904 Olympics were apparently the first Olympics to be reported in the press back in China.

The world's fair was America's coming-out party as a world power. It had just acquired the former Spanish colonies of the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Guam as a result of the Spanish-American war of 1898 and the subsequent Philippines-American war. At the fair, it presented itself as an expanding power, with an extremely large display devoted to the Philippines. Another large section of the exposition grounds was devoted to displays intended to demonstrate that the government was succeeding in civilizing American Indians.

This article reflects on Olympic debuts by the US, Japan and China, and the conflict between the established powers and newcomes as well as questions of nation and empire that are played out on the field of international sports.

This essay was originally posted on The China Beat (5-3-08). It has been revised and expanded for Japan Focus. Posted at Japan Focus on May 16, 2008.

Susan Brownell is the author of Training the Body for China and Beijing's Games: What the Olympics Mean to China.

Read the rest here =>

Susan Brownell is the author of Training the Body for China, which is widely recognized as the single best scholarly work on Chinese sports. Her latest book is Beijing's Games: What the Olympics Mean to China.Recommend this Post


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Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Phillip J Cunningham, "When the best in the West get it wrong," Informed Comment: Global Affairs

The earthquake in China offers those in the Western press a chance to do what they do best --report the facts, but it may also turn out to be field day for those who like to hit a country when it is down. Some good old-fashioned reporting would be a good change of pace for certain US and European news outlets, especially the recently maligned CNN, to repair reputations tattered for sloppy reporting on Tibet.

[...]

[In Burma] China's timely material aid was viewed as a PR exercise, while reckless US and French offers to essentially invade Burma to save it from itself, were cast in a deeply humanitarian light.

[...]

And now, another huge human tragedy, the earthquake in Sichuan....Here CNN has a chance to reverse its declining China fortunes, for the Beijing bureau is lucky to have a seasoned China hand like Jaime Florcruz at the helm....Earlier today, he quietly pointed out in a live report that the Chinese government is pretty good at marshaling resources in times of disaster.

On a not entirely unrelated topic, I have been reviewing Western media coverage of Tiananmen 1989 for an upcoming twenty-year retrospective. I worked as a freelancer for BBC at that time, and at one time or another have done work with NBC, NHK, CCTV and have contributed to China documentaries aired by CBS, TV Asahi and PBS. It is dismaying that after all this time, an event of such importance to the Chinese people is still taboo to the Chinese media. Secondarily, it is lamentable that so much of the Western coverage was narcissistic and imagination-driven.


Read the whole article =>

Cunningham's piece on Tiananmen 1989 is in the Bangkok Post under the title, "When the best in the West get it wrong." Getting it wrong is a euphemism for what he describes. =>

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Friday, May 02, 2008

B. Raman, "Sino-Tibetan contacts to resume," Raman's Strategic Analysis

Chhime R. Chhoekyapa, Secretary to His Holiness the Dalai Lama, issued the following statement at Dharamsala, the headquarters of His Holiness in Himachal Pradesh, on May 2,2008:

"His Holiness the Dalai Lama's Special Envoy Lodi Gyaltsen Gyari and Envoy Kelsang Gyaltsen will arrive in China on May 3, 2008 for informal talks with representatives of the Chinese leadership. During this brief visit, the envoys will take up the urgent issue of the current crisis in the Tibetan areas. They will convey His Holiness the Dalai Lama's deep concerns about the Chinese authorities' handling of the situation and also provide suggestions to bring peace to the region. Since the Chinese leadership has indicated, publicly as well as in briefings given to foreign governments, its position on the continuation of the dialogue, the envoys will raise the issue of moving forward on the process for a mutually satisfactory solution to the Tibetan issue. "

Annexed for background information is a chronology of the past history of contacts between the representatives of His Holiness and the Chinese authorities. This has been prepared and updated periodically by the Dharamsala office of His Holiness. (2-5-08)

The chronology covers five periods of dialogue between China and Tibet:
  • Hopes and Suspicions (1978-1987)
  • A Row over the Internationalisation of the Tibet Issue (1987-1990)
  • Stalemate in Dialogue (1990-1993)
  • Confrontation (1994-2001)
  • Renewed Contacts (2002- )

For the whole post, including the chronology =>

(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai. He is also associated with the Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail: seventyonbe2@gmail.com)
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Sunday, April 20, 2008

Wang Lixiong and further notes about Tibet

Wang Lixiong is a Beijing-based writer. He was the organiser of the twelve-point statement on Tibet by twenty-nine Chinese intellectuals, released on 22 March 2008. This article was published in the Wall Street Journal. It was translated from the Chinese by Perry Link of Princeton University. He is also the author of "Reflections on Tibet," an article in the March/April 2002 edition of New Left Review, which was recently recommended in a comment on Uri Avnery's article on Tibet and Palestine. The WSJ/openDemocracy is packed with useful links.

Wang Lixiong, "China and Tibet: the true path," April 15, 2008.

The recent troubles in Tibet are a replay of events that happened two decades ago. On 1 October 1987, Buddhist monks were demonstrating peacefully at the Barkor - the famous market street around the central cathedral in Lhasa - when police began beating and arresting them. To ordinary Tibetans, who view monks as "treasures", the sight was intolerable - not only in itself, but because it stimulated unpleasant memories that Tibetan Buddhists had been harbouring for years (see Tubten Khétsun, Memories of Life in Lhasa Under Chinese Rule [Columbia University Press, 2008]).

A few angry young men then began throwing stones at the Barkor police station. More and more joined in, and then they started fires, overturned cars and began shouting "Independence for Tibet!" This is almost exactly what was witnessed in Lhasa on 14 March 2008.

Read the rest =>

Some interesting images and ideas in links provided by a listener to the World Report broadcast. Some suffer from a shortage of information about the identity of individuals reponsible, authors, filmmakers, interviewers etc. Even so, a broader range of questions than is currently being asked appears to be warranted, if not imperative. If you have more information about these sources, please contact worldreport at cjly dot net.

Australian tourist video of what happened in Tibet, March 20, 2008.

How the Western media reports the Tibet riots (put together by some young Chinese Americans).

Dalai Lama’s group receive money from CIA.


Some reflections about Tibet and Dalai Lama. Who is this? Sounds like someone who knows his stuff, but we just get a fragment and no names. Internet archeology.


Bill Shiller, "Canadians caught in Tibet's violence," Toronto Star, March 17, 2008.



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Friday, April 18, 2008

Uprising in Tibet: What is it like?

[One way of viewing the Lhasa riots and the anti-Olympics campaign, is that the Tibetans have a land claim which requires negotiation. If, as Phil Fontaine suggests, the plight of Canadian First Nations is strongly analogous to that of the Tibetans, then it might be reasonable to ask, what is it like? Oka? Ipperwash? New Caledonia?

I'd like to suggest that the closest analogy in recent times is a heavily underreported incident known as the Gustafsen Lake standoff, also known as the Ts'Peten Standoff. Both the similitaries and the differences are worth considering. -jlt]

OTTAWA -- Canadian native groups might highlight the "desperate conditions" in their communities with protests during Vancouver's 2010 Olympics similar to this year's pro-Tibet demonstrations, First Nations leader Phil Fontaine warned Thursday.

This despite a memorandum of understanding with Vancouver's Olympics Committee (VANOC) signed by Mr. Fontaine and the Four Host First Nations last summer.

"What that speaks to is the desperate situation in our communities," said MR. Fontaine, Grand Chief of the Assembly of First Nations. "We find the Tibet situation compelling. The Tibetans are disenfranchised people. The situation here is similar, but it's different in this sense - the poverty we're talking about exists in Canada's own backyard.

"It's OK to express outrage with the Chinese government's position against Tibet, but [Canadians] should be just as outraged, if not more so . . . with what is being done to First Nations here."

[...]




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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Wenran Jiang, "Tibetan unrest, Chinese lens," openDemocracy, April 7, 2008.

[This article introduces the relatively new concept of cybernationalism. In May 2006, the Norwegian anthropologist, Thomas H. Erikson presented a working paper on Nations in Cyberspace. Responses to that paper are reproduced here.

[...]

"For their part, many in the Chinese diaspora have exhibited a strong sense of nationalism that opposes any Tibetan independence movement and resents any form of boycott of the Beijing Olympics.


"What is surprising, however, is the very high level of mobilisation of Chinese public opinion (including in the blogosphere) that is not as much a response to Beijing's rallying calls for national unity as it is a strong reaction to what many Chinese perceive as the one-sided reporting of the Tibetan unrest by the western press. Chinese people everywhere want their side of the Tibet story told.

"In 1989, Chinese people all over the world, including scholars and students from the mainland, protested against the government crackdown on students in Tiananmen Square. This time, by contrast, Chinese people - in European and Canadian cities, for example - have taken to the streets in support of Beijing.

"While many overseas Chinese believe that Beijing's extremely harsh and hostile words against the Dalai Lama are neither effective nor well received by the western public, they still see western news media as being excessively anti-China. (Many noted errors in the reporting, including the mislabelling of photos of Indian and Nepalese police confronting demonstrating monks as Chinese soldiers cracking down in Tibet.)

"They have fed their observations back to Chinese cyberspace instantly, in a process that is part of an emerging synergy of cybernationalism connecting many Chinese at home and abroad."

[...]

Read the whole =>


Wenran Jiang is an associate professor of political science at the University of Alberta, Canada, and acting director of the China Institute (CIUA) there This article is also published in the Globe and Mail.Recommend this Post


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James Millward, "China's story: putting the PR in the PRC," openDemocracy, April 17, 2008.

[...]

"While the west has focused on the chaotic and even amusing aspects (French police on roller-blades, Chinese torch-guards in dark shades on a cloudy day), in China the iconic image is of the young female paralympic fencer Jin Jing struggling to hold the torch from her wheelchair while a grimacing free-Tibet protestor attempts to wrest it from her grasp. As with the Tibetan protests generally, people in the People's Republic of China (PRC) and the world at large see the events of the torch tour in radically different ways.

"A similar disconnect characterises recent Chinese announcements of foiled terrorist plots by Uighurs, the Turkic Muslims from China's Xinjiang region. Several official reports - regarding a raid on an alleged terror cell in Urumqi in January 2008, an attempt by a young Uighur woman and a man to bring down an airliner in March, and Uighur plans to attack tourist hotels and kidnap foreign journalists in April - have all met with scepticism by foreign media and analysts, infuriating Chinese authorities.

"Despite unprecedented information interchange, despite more than two decades of Chinese openness to and deep economic integration with the world, and despite the promise of the Olympic moment, there is now a situation in which world public opinion, and that in China, are diametrically opposed.

Read the whole article =>



James A Millward is professor of history at Georgetown University. Among his books is Eurasian Crossroads: A History of Xinjiang (C Hurst, 2007).Recommend this Post


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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

20 questions about Tibet

Corrections: Last week I played a clip from Global's National news program featuring a statement by nato Director General Jaap Hoop de Scheffer. I told you that the reporter's voice on that clip was that of Ben O'Hara. His full name is Ben O'Hara Byrne. My apologies for the mistake.

Feature

When you consider that the original demonstrations and riots in Tibet took place more than a month ago and the Tibet story has been in the news every day since then, it is probably significant that reliable information continues to be hard to come by.

Take for example, the reports of casualties. In the first days, Tibetan authorities reported 99, then 100, then 111. By April 4, the Green Left Review was saying “According to Tibetan sources, 140 protesters have been shot by police and troops. The Chinese government has only acknowledged 18 deaths: those that occurred on March 14 when crowds rioted in Lhasa.”

Oddly, the coverage of these events which were largely unattended by the press has been not only frequent but extremely widespread—so much so that any attempt to generalize would be foolish.

For a while, I read these stories as they were reported—more or less obsessively. In the end, there was a lot that I just didn't bother with, but I can offer some impressions that may be of some use.

The pattern in the quotation above was fairly common. Information about casualties among protesters was attributed to “Tibetan authorities” and generally hovered around 100. Another figure was attributed to “the Chinese government” or less frequently, "the Chinese" or just "China."

Not once did I see or hear an individual or an institution named. Who came up with this figure? And where were they? How would they know? And would they have an interest in inflating the numbers? Or dismissing them? Or discrediting one or both of the sources?

The reporting has been dismal. It would not have passed a high school English class. The numbers from China or the Chinese or Chinese authorities or the Chinese government were as low as 18 and as high as 34 or 35. But what did the numbers purported to count? Were these Chinese estimates of casualties among the Tibetan protesters? Readers were generally left to draw this inference or to speculate.

A few reports said that 33 or 34 Han and Hui Chinese were killed by the rioters. It was clear from videos taken in Lhasa that there were some deaths that were not among the protesters but among those who had been attacked by them. I recall one report that claimed a single Chinese policeman had died in the riots.

These are not the only unreliable numbers. What is the percentage of indigenous Tibetans now living in the Tibetan Autonomous Region? What percentage of the annual domestic product of the region comes from Tibetan owned businesses? How do other demographic numbers compare between Tibetans and Han or the Muslim Hui Chinese living in Tibet—literacy, education, health, longevity, prosperity?

Each of these questions has been "answered" with wildly diverging numbers.

How does the economic well-being of Tibetans compare with that of other Chinese?
Are there any reliable figures that document the domination of the Tibetan economy by Han and Hui Chinese? Or are we stuck with anecdotal reports?

Of course, asking about these numbers is a way of trying to find out about social justice. Are Tibetan people discriminated against in China?

The answer seems to depend on who you ask. If I could ask whoever I wanted, I would ask Tibetan peasants. But it seems there has always been someone to speak for them—monasteries, wealthy landowners, emperors and party committees.

What were human rights like in Tibet before the Dalai Lama left in 1959?

I wonder about the 1956 uprising. Here again are numbers that stand for questions of a more philosophical quality. How many people were killed in 1956? How many people fled after the uprising? Who were they?

Why was the uprising fought in 1956 and not in 1951 when the Chinese took over?
What role did the British play in Tibet? What role did Tibet have in the British Empire?

Add to this the ambiguity of purpose and flaky, reverential reporting by the North American press--does the Free Tibet movement want a sovereign Tibet? or greater autonomy? or reconciliation with China? Surely they are not asking us to believe that they propose to elect the Dalai Lama. So democracy is out of the question, isn't it?

That's more than 20 questions and only the last one was rhetorical. So take your pick.

Mexican community radio activists killed

Mexico April 8, 2008, Two Journalists of the Community Radio La Voz que Rompe el Silencio in the neibourghood of San Juan Copala, Oaxaca (southest of Mexico), Felicitas Martínez Sánchez, 21 years old and Teresa Bautista Merino, 24 years died from bullet wounds while travelling the highway from Joya del Mamey to Putla de Guerrero in the State of Oaxaca. Another four people were wounded on April 7, 2008.

The Community Radio La Voz que Rompe el Silencio has been broadcasting since January 2007. The project is formed mainly by youngsters and adolescents from Trique indigenous people present in the region.

The Journalists were on their way home from a meeting in Llano Juárez inviting locals there to participate in the radio station.

The World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters in Montreal is calling for a letter writing campaign urging prompt investigation of the murders, punishment of those responsible and protection for the witnesses and their children. A list of Mexican officials and their addresses is available at the World Report blog.


Podcasting

In two weeks, World Report will be moving to a 30-minute format at a new time, Monday evenings at 6 pm. So keep an eye out.

The question of the week for KCR: What is a podcast, and what do we need to know about them? “Podcast” is a marketing term that Apple Computers invented to describe how the iPod can be used to listen to material you get off the Internet or take off a cd. But you don't have to own an iPod to take advantage of podcasting.

Who owns it? Who controls it? Who decides? Who profits? Who takes responsibility? Who does the work? Who needs it? What are the benefits and what are the costs? What are the risks?

iTunes Canada Pulls Homophobic Music

iTunes Canada has removed several songs by Jamaican artists Elephant Man, TOK, and Buju Banton because they call on listeners to murder gay men. Stop Murder Music Canada and Egale called on Apple to remove the songs, which contained lyrics translating to “Join our dance and let’s burn the queer man” and “Boom Boom, queers must be killed.” Although the move has caused some controversy about freedom of expression and censorship, one thing is clear: it’s not legal. Speech calling for the murder and hatred of an identifiable group violates Canadian hate laws, and Stop Murder Music Canada has called on other music retailers—such as HMV, Amazon.ca, and Archambault Musique—to follow Apple’s suit. Jamaican dancehall music is notorious for its homophobic lyrics. Homophobia is rampant in Jamaica, with 43 lynch mob attacks on gay men reported in 2007 alone, resulting in the murder of at least 10 gay men.

In case you missed it, you can get a free subscription to the World Report podcast delivered to your email inbox or to your feed reader. If you'd rather read than listen, text versions are often available on the blog.

Learn about actions and campaigns, connect with the progressive Canadian blogosphere, find links to contemporary videos.

Remember the poll question on the blog: What do you see as the most urgent security issue? Would you be surprised to learn that the number for whom economic dependence on the US is the most urgent equals the number for whom peak oil is the most urgent security issue.

You can follow the stalled negotiations on the US-India nuclear deal on the World Report blog's The Hot Topic, which is currently searches for the IAEA and the Nuclear Supplier's Group.

The World Report Editor's Choice this week includes an interesting article on how a railway line built by Canada's Bombardier is transforming Tibetan trade; an article by the Jewish pagan writer Starhawk on her experience of being thrown out of Israel; and a must read article from the Bretton Woods Project that discusses a number of recent reports calling on the World Bank to get serious about human rights.
There's also an excelent piece by Jay Rosen called the News about the News. It's a text and podcast that begins like this "This seems to be the moment in which the death of the American newspaper can be foretold with some authority."

While I'm thinking about it, this Friday at noon, I will be hosting an independent media panel to look at who we think we are and what we think we are doing here at Coop Radio. I'll have several hosts of Nelson before nine and and interview with Deb Burnett, our sposorship coordinator to talk about adversing as a license to do business. That's this Friday, April 18 at 12 noon 93.5 FM in Nelson, 96.5 up the Lake and www dot kootenaycoopradio dot com on the internet. Check it out.
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Monday, April 14, 2008

"Eminent monks, masters condemn violence, pray for Olympics," Ecumenical Buddhism, April 13, 2008.


Blogger Ecumencal Buddhism reports on the April 12 meeting of the Buddhist Association of China. Vice-Secretary General of the Association, Master Xue Cheng said,

"The March 14 riot incurred great losses to people and property and seriously damaged the image of Buddhism. The act, aiming to create disturbance and instability and realize the 'Tibet independence', runs counter to the Buddhist commandments and will be reprimanded by Buddhist followers."


Master Hai Tao from Taiwan is quoted as saying
"Damage to peace should not be incurred by Buddhists for whatever reason, especially the act of using violence to spoil peace in order to achieve a special political plot," he said.

"The development of the Chinese mainland was rapid and prosperous. We strongly denounce the disruption of social stability using the Olympics as a pretense."


The website includes articles on Politics and Buddhism, the text of the Dalai Lama's telegram to Mao in 1951, as well as more orthodox Buddhist subjects.

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Sunday, April 13, 2008

Gideon Levy, "Palestinians versus Tibetans - a double standard," April 13, 2008.

[Even rare articles like this one fail to acknowledge either (1) that Free Tibet is not a nonviolent movement for "greater autonomy" but has an armed wing that revolts against the Chinese government for an independent Tibet or (2) that numerous nonviolent Palestinian and Israeli groups work together every day as partners for peace. The naming and framing of these conflicts is an important determinant of what, if anything at all, is seen as an achievable solution.

This is not to say that Tibetan activists should be seen only as violent separatists or that Palestinians should be seen only as nonviolent activists. However, in both cases, the frame within which the debate occurs must include both realities which are routinely ignored, not only by the press but by academic and political experts in their public discourse. -jlt]

Israelis have no moral right to fight the Chinese occupation of Tibet. The president of the Israeli Friends of the Tibetan People, the psychologist Nahi Alon, who was involved in the murder of two Palestinians in Gaza in 1967 - as was revealed in Haaretz Magazine last weekend - chose to make his private "atonement" by fighting to free Tibet, of all places. He is not alone among Israelis calling to stop the occupation - but not ours. No small number of other good Israelis have recently joined the wave of global protest that broke out over the Olympics, set to take place in Beijing this summer. It is easy; it engenders no controversy - who would not be in favor of liberating Tibet? But that is not the fight that Israeli human rights supporters should be waging.

To fight for Tibet, Israel needs no courage, because there is no price to pay. On the contrary, this is part of a fashionable global trend, almost as much as the fight against global warming or the poaching of sea lions.

These fights are just, and must be undertaken. But in Israel they are deluxe fights, which are unthinkable. When one comes to the fight with hands that are collectively, and sometimes individually, so unclean, it is impossible to protest a Chinese occupation.
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Citizens of a country that maintains a military subjugation in its backyard that is no less cruel than that of the Chinese, and by some parameters even more so, and against which there is practically no more protest here, have no justification in denouncing another occupation. Citizens of a country that is entirely tainted by the occupation - a national, ongoing project that involves all sectors of the population to some extent, directly or indirectly - cannot wash their hands and fight another occupation, when a half-hour from their homes, horrors no less terrible are taking place for which they have much greater responsibility.

The world has fallen in love with Tibet. How easy it is to do so. The picturesque figure of the Dalai Lama and the non-violent struggle he leads with his scarlet-robed monks is truly captivating. Indeed, the world has smothered the leader with awards and recognition, from the Nobel Peace Prize to an honorary doctorate at Ben-Gurion University.

The Palestinians are not as nice as the Tibetans in the eyes of the world. But the Palestinian people deserve exactly the same rights as the occupied Tibetan people, even if their leaders are less enchanting, they have no scarlet robes and their fight is more violent. There is absolutely no connection between rights and the means of protest, and from that perspective, there is no difference between a Tibetan and a Palestinian - they both deserve the exact same freedom.

Moreover, in the first years of the Israeli occupation, most Palestinians accepted it submissively, with practically no violence. What did they get as a result? Nothing. The world and Israel cloaked themselves in apathy and callousness. Only when planes started being hijacked in the 1970s did the world begin to notice that a Palestinian problem even existed. In contrast, the Tibetan struggle also was tainted with violence in the past, and it is reasonable to assume that violence will increase if the Tibetans do not attain their goal.

There is also no point in asking which occupation is crueler, the Chinese or the Israeli. The competition is harsh and bitter. The Chinese killed and imprisoned more Tibetans, in Lhasa there is less freedom of expression than in Nablus, but in general, the extent of Israeli repression in the territories is much greater today than Chinese repression in Tibet.

Nowhere in the world today is there a region more besieged and confined than Gaza. And what is the result? The world calls to boycott the occupier in the case of China, while absurdly, with regard to the Palestinians, the world is boycotting the occupied entity, or at least its elected leadership, and not the occupier. This, it seems, has no parallel in history.

Internationally speaking, the situation of the Palestinians is ostensibly better, since while all governments recognize Chinese sovereignty over Tibet, no government in the world recognizes Israeli sovereignty over the Palestinian territories. Practically speaking, this does not help the Palestinians much: Contemporary bon ton is to support the struggle for Tibet, only Tibet. The Palestinians have not even one Richard Gere to serve as a mouthpiece. German Chancellor Angela Merkel is boycotting the Olympic games but paid an official visit to Israel, where she spoke not one word about the shameful conditions in Gaza under Israeli occupation. Is there any other way to describe this, except a double standard?

In a more just world, no occupation would exist - neither the Chinese nor the Israeli. But until that time, the Israelis have to look inward at their own home and protest what is being done there in front of the Israeli Defense Ministry, before they present themselves with colorful signs outside the Chinese Embassy.

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Tuesday, April 08, 2008

A Statement of Concern on the Situation in Tibet from Asian NGOs, April 3, 2008.

We are saddened and alarmed that the peaceful protest led by Buddhist monks in the Tibetan capital on March 10, which was followed by a wave of sympathy protests in the neighboring Tibetan areas after that day, has drawn a strong response from the Chinese authorities. We also deplore the unrest that followed, even though we understand the problems that gave rise to them.

We are concerned about the police and military build-up in response to these events not only in Lhasa but also in Tibetan areas of western China.

We believe that news blockade and censorship of the media are not helpful for the Chinese people and the international community and damage the credibility of the Chinese government.

The problems in Tibet are complex and long-standing and the demands for cultural and religious freedoms are well known. However, the more recent rapid economic development of the region has created huge inequalities and further marginalized

Tibetans. As we have seen in many other regions of the world, inequality and marginalization are the consequences of rapid economic development and globalization, all too often resulting in tensions and conflicts. These tensions and conflicts cannot be addressed through force and suppression, but rather through dialogue based on respect.

As concerned Asians, we call on the Chinese government to respect the aspirations of the Tibetan people, to listen seriously to their problems, and to engage in open and transparent talks with the Dalai Lama and other Tibetan groups.

We believe that violence offers no solution and we call for restraint from both sides: the Chinese government should not arrest innocent people and should give fair trial to those who allegedly committed crimes during the unrest. We also advise Tibetans to avoid attacking or destroying properties of Han Chinese and Chinese Muslims as this could result to more militarization.

We urge the authorities to continue allowing foreign and independent press to enter the region to ensure that events are reported and for arrests of protesters to be known.

Finally, we ask the governments of India and Nepal to desist from using force to disperse demonstrations by exiled Tibetans in support of their compatriots and to allow them freedom of speech and assembly.

Signed:

Alyansa ng Kabataang Mindanao Para sa Kapayapaan (AKMK), Philippines
Alternative ASEAN Network on Burma
Asia Pacific Forum on Women Law and Development
Asian Federation Against Involuntary Disappearances (AFAD)
Association of War Affected Women, Sri Lanka
BRP – Bahujan Maha Sangh, India
BALAY Rehabilitation Center , Philippines
BanglaPraxis, Bangladesh
Bombay Urban Industrial League for Development (BUILD), India
Campaign for Popular Media Reform (CPMR), Philippines
Centre for Peace Building and Reconciliation, Sri Lanka
Committee for Asian Women
Coordination of Action Research on AIDS and Mobility (CARAM Asia )
Demokratikong Kilusang Magbubukid ng Pilipinas-Lanao, Philippines
Educational Network for Global and Grassroots Exchange , Thailand / US
EKTA (Committee for Communal Amity), Mumbai, India
EQUAL GROUND, Sri Lanka
Focus on the Global South
Forum Asia
Foundation for Media Alternatives, Philippines
Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women (GAATW)
Human Rights Working Group, Indonesia
Institute for Global Justice (IGJ), Indonesia
Institute for Popular Democracy (IPD), Philippines
International Gender and Trade Network-Asia
International Friends for Global Peace, Sri Lanka
International Women's Rights Action Watch - Asia Pacific
KAISA – KA, Philippines
Lanao Alliance of Human Rights Advocates (LAHRA), Philippines
Lanao Fisherfolks Advocacy Network (LFAN), Philippines
Law & Society Trust , Sri Lanka
Liga ng Makabagong Kabataan (LMK), Philippines
LIPS / Sedane Labor Resource Center, Indonesia
Mindanao Peoples' Peace Movement (MPPM), Philippines
Mindanao Tri-People Women Forum (MTWF), Philippines
Nonviolence International - Southeast Asia
Northern Development Foundation, Thailand
Pakistan-India Peoples' Forum for Peace & Democracy, India
Pakistan Institute of Labour Education and Research (PILER), Pakistan .
Peoples Media Initiative, India
Peoples Partner for Development and Democracy (PPDD), Thailand
Peoples' Union for Civil Liberties, India
Ranao Tri-People Movement for Genuine Peace and Development, Philippines
Shan Women's Action Network (SWAN), Thailand
Social Development & Research Organization, Sri Lanka
Society for Alternative Media and research, Pakistan
Solidarity Workshop International, Bangladesh
Southeast Asian Press Alliance
South Asia Left Democratic Alliance - Canada
Sumpay Mindanao , Philippines
Transnationals Information Exchange Asia (TIE Asia )
World March of Women – Asian members
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Media faillure: variations on a theme


Feature

This morning on World Report we review several of the week's top stories from a larger perspective in order to glimpse, if we can, the motions of an agenda, a double standard, a general theme at work. Coverage of the NATO meeting in Bucharest, Romania, for example, portrayed Putin as aggressively “winning” one round and losing another while at least one important agreement was almost swept under the rug. A unique perspective on one of the week's most overtold story, the Free Tibet protests, comes from an unexpected source. At the same time, one of several stories of importance for Canadians was crowded to the margins. In Kinshasa, the new Congolese government finished its review of mining contracts negotiated by the previous corrupt dictatorship, and a Canadian company takes center stage.


Those stories in a few minutes, but first,

NATO in Bucharest

On Friday, the Times Online of London wrote of “Russia's new abrasiveness” and declared Putin “the winner on points” when the alliance declined to admit Georgia and Ukraine into membership.

For the CBC as for the NYT, the key story was France's decision to send 700 new troops. (NYT Apr 3 08)

Third and last was the decision to go ahead with missile defense installations in Poland and the Czech Republic. This was generally scored as a 2-to-1 victory over the abrasive Russians.

Another piece of the NATO story of potentially much greater importance in practical terms nearly escaped notice altogether. Back on March 6, James Blitz of the Financial Times had briefly reported that Russia had been talking to western governments about the possibility of allowing goods destined for the mission in Afghanistan to be transported across Russian territory.

This is important for several reasons. A substantial part of the supply line for NATO troops in Afghanistan comes through the Pakistani port of Karachi. Figures range from 45 percent to 80 percent. Even the low end of that range is a lot, especially considering recent concerns about the stability of Pakistan.

The US has been evicted from its base in Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan has shown some displeasure at the American base on its soil by raising the rent.

Although the public debates moral questions about wars halfway around the globe, the practical problems of maintaining a 10,000 mile supply line are considerable. It is probably an exaggeration to say that without Karachi the war effort would collapse, but it would certainly become considerably more expensive.

While we may doubt the wisdom of Russia getting involved again in Afghanistan—have they learned their lesson or not?--still their offer to provide a supply route through their territory can hardly be portrayed as abrasive or unfriendly.

As far as I could tell, the CBC didn't portray it at all. Neither did CTV. But Ben O'Hara Byrn at the Global National has this 17 second report, briefly quoting UN Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.
Global: There was a breakthrough today on Afghanistan.

NATO: Russia and NATO have embarked upon a common, joint effort to help Afghanistan.

Global: Russia agreeing to allow some NATO force supplies to be shipped across its territory to Afghanistan avoiding more dangerous routes used now.

Meanwhile, Uri Avnery, the 80-something Israeli peace activist weighed in on how to frame the Tibet-China clashes that have so preoccupied the western press since March 10.

Avnery sees the clash between the Tibetans and the Chinese as a liberation struggle.

“Like everybody else, I support the right of the Tibetan people to independence, or at least autonomy. Like everybody else, I condemn the actions of the Chinese government there. But unlike everybody else, I am not ready to join in the demonstrations.

"Why? Because I have an uneasy feeling that somebody is washing my brain, that what is going on is an exercise in hypocrisy.”

This is not the place to reproduce Avnery's whole argument. You can read his article on the World Report blog or go directly to Gush Shalom.

He recognizes the CIA involvement, sees Tibet as a token in a game being played out between the superpower in decline and the superpower on the rise. But what about other liberation struggles and separation movements.

“...what is really bugging me,” he says, “is the hypocrisy of the world media. They storm and thunder about Tibet....as if the Tibetans are the only people on earth whose right to independence is being denied by brutal force...”

What about the Kurds or the inhabitants of Western Sahara whose territory is occupied by Morocco? What about the Basques or the Corsicans off the coast of France? Or the Chechnyans? What about the Serbs of Kosovo? Or the demands for separation by French-Canadians or Scots, or by Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia?

Ah, the issues in Georgia are not so simple as the reports from Bucharest would suggest.

Avnery asks, “What makes the blood of one Tibetan redder than the blood of a thousand Africans in East Congo?” The answer to that question may be gold, or diamonds, or coltan—maybe even copper.

Back in July 2007, the Halifax Initiative reported that the US government’s Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC), Canada's tax-supported Export Development Corporation, and the European Investment Bank were ready to back the Tenke Fungurume copper project in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

The Tenke project encompasses one of the largest copper-cobalt deposits in the world. The majority share is held by the US company Freeport McMoRan (formerly Phelps Dodge) and Canada’s Tenke Mining.

"In May, the government of the DRC announced its intention to revisit mining contracts signed over the past decade, during the war and under the transitional government in place until last year’s national elections. The review process, which got underway on June 18, responds to concerns raised in various audits, independent studies and a DRC parliamentary commission report, regarding the fairness and legality of the contracts. Organizations including the World Bank have cited concerns about mining contracts in the Congo, including: a lack of transparency in the negotiation and awarding of deals, undeclared conflicts of interest, the inclusion of ill-defined “management” fees and other questionable payments, a failure to properly assess Congolese assets and contributions to the deals, and the inclusion of disadvantageous terms to the Congolese government." (Halifax Initiative Jul 11 07).

Well, the government's review came out this March. The commission found that during the transition process (2003 - 2006) one third of the Congo was sold off to foreign companies without any discernible benefit to the Congo; that 4542 mining titles had been dispensed to 642 companies; that 90 percent of exports from DRC are either illegal or unregulated.

This is just the tip of the iceberg. A summary of another eight key findings can be found on the World Report blog. But that is just the background for the bigger story, the East Congolese blood Avnery refers to.

Médecins Sans Frontières-Suisse has noted that since 2003, between 30 and 500 patients reported sexual assaults each month in Ituri. Panzi general hospital in Bukavu, South Kivu's capital, admits at least 10 victims of sexual assault daily, an average of 3,600 cases a year, according to its director, Denis Mukwege Mukengere. Since 2000, an estimated 16,000 victims of rape, some suffering from obstetric fistula, have been treated at the hospital.

That is to say nothing of killings, of internally displaced, of the new wheat fungus Ug99 (stem rust), of soaring food and fuel costs. The DRC is a country whose multiple wars were forced off the international stage by Afghanistan. That brings us just about full circle to the 700 new French troops for Afghanistan.



The KCR programme selection committee has approved a proposal to move World Report to a 30-minute format for next season. More interviews, more viewpoints, more special features.

In case you miss it, you can download an mp3 of the World Report broadcast in any one of several different ways depending on what is convenient for you. This week for the first time the World Report podcast is now available on iTunes. Go to iTunes dot com and enter Kootenay Coop Radio into the Search field and you should see icons for 10 KCR shows now available on iTunes. World Report continues to podcast for your personal use from radio4all dot net. Both sites allow you to get a free subscription updated each time a new show is posted. If you use an iPod or iTunes reader, subscribe from the iTunes site. If you use live bookmarks or a reader application radio4all will do the trick.

If you'd rather read than listen, text versions and reader comments are often available on the information-rich World Report blog at worldreport dot see jay elle wye dot net.


Don't forget the poll question. What do you see as the most urgent security issue? This question will run until the end of the current season on April 27. As I've mentioned before, it's not a scientific survey, but the answers are revealing. So far, no one who has answered the poll question has chosen terrorism, gun crime, HIV/AIDS or avian flu as the most urgent threat.

My thanks to Dave Embry KCR's podcasting technician who sees to it that the most recent show makes it onto iTunes; to Jon Steinman of Deconstructing Dinner for spearheading the iTunes podcasting project of KCR's Spoken Word Collective; and to Rik Logtenberg for pulling it all together on the new KCR website which is developing in his capable hands. Thanks to Kate Cormie at Sidewinders Coffee Company for their sponsorship of the World Report question of the day, and to Amber Hieb at CHLY in Nanaimo, BC and Mike Cannon at WNRB in Wasau, Wisconsin who rebroadcast World Report.

If you rebroadcast World Report, I'd like to learn more about your show and your station.

Feel free to comment or suggest a story. If you have information we should know about send your plain brown envelope to Box 767, Nelson, British Columbia Canada V1L 5R4 Attention: World Report or email to worldreport (alloneword) at sea jay el wai dot net.
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Saturday, April 05, 2008

Uri Avnery, "On Tibet and Palestine: 'Not You! You!!!'" April 5, 2008.

"Hey! Take your hands off me! Not you! You!!!" - the voice of a young woman in the darkened cinema, an old joke.

"Hey! Take your hands off Tibet!" the international chorus is crying out, "But not from Chechnya! Not from the Basque homeland! And certainly not from Palestine!" And that is not a joke.

LIKE EVERYBODY else, I support the right of the Tibetan people to independence, or at least autonomy. Like everybody else, I condemn the actions of the Chinese government there. But unlike everybody else, I am not ready to join in the demonstrations.

Why? Because I have an uneasy feeling that somebody is washing my brain, that what is going on is an exercise in hypocrisy.

I don't mind a bit of manipulation. After all, it is not by accident that the riots started in Tibet on the eve of the Olympic Games in Beijing. That's alright. A people fighting for their freedom have the right to use any opportunity that presents itself to further their struggle.

I support the Tibetans in spite of it being obvious that the Americans are exploiting the struggle for their own purposes. Clearly, the CIA has planned and organized the riots, and the American media are leading the world-wide campaign. It is a part of the hidden struggle between the US, the reigning super-power, and China, the rising super-power - a new version of the "Great Game" that was played in central Asia in the 19th century by the British Empire and Russia. Tibet is a token in this game.

I am even ready to ignore the fact that the gentle Tibetans have carried out a murderous pogrom against innocent Chinese, killing women and men and burning homes and shops. Such detestable excesses do happen during a liberation struggle.

No, what is really bugging me is the hypocrisy of the world media. They storm and thunder about Tibet. In thousands of editorials and talk-shows they heap curses and invective on the evil China. It seems as if the Tibetans are the only people on earth whose right to independence is being denied by brutal force, that if only Beijing would take its dirty hands off the saffron-robed monks, everything would be alright in this, the best of all possible worlds.


THERE IS no doubt that the Tibetan people are entitled to rule their own country, to nurture their unique culture, to promote their religious institutions and to prevent foreign settlers from submerging them.

But are not the Kurds in Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Syria entitled to the same? The inhabitants of Western Sahara, whose territory is occupied by Morocco? The Basques in Spain? The Corsicans off the coast of France? And the list is long.

Why do the world's media adopt one independence struggle, but often cynically ignore another independence struggle? What makes the blood of one Tibetan redder than the blood of a thousand Africans in East Congo?

Again and again I try to find a satisfactory answer to this enigma. In vain.

Immanuel Kant demanded of us: "Act as if the principle by which you act were about to be turned into a universal law of nature." (Being a German philosopher, he expressed it in much more convoluted language.) Does the attitude towards the Tibetan problem conform to this rule? Does it reflect our attitude towards the struggle for independence of all other oppressed peoples?

Not at all.


WHAT, THEN, causes the international media to discriminate between the various liberation struggles that are going on throughout the world?

Here are some of the relevant considerations:

- Do the people seeking independence have an especially exotic culture?

- Are they an attractive people, i.e. "sexy" in the view of the media?

- Is the struggle headed by a charismatic personality who is liked by the media?

- It the oppressing government disliked by the media?

- Does the oppressing government belong to the pro-American camp? This is an important factor, since the United States dominates a large part of the international media, and its news agencies and TV networks largely define the agenda and the terminology of the news coverage.

- Are economic interests involved in the conflict?

- Does the oppressed people have gifted spokespersons, who are able to attract attention and manipulate the media?


FROM THESE points of view, there is nobody like the Tibetans. They enjoy ideal conditions.

Fringed by the Himalayas, they are located in one of the most beautiful landscapes on earth. For centuries, just to get there was an adventure. Their unique religion arouses curiosity and sympathy. Its non-violence is very attractive and elastic enough to cover even the ugliest atrocities, like the recent pogrom. The exiled leader, the Dalai Lama, is a romantic figure, a media rock-star. The Chinese regime is hated by many - by capitalists because it is a Communist dictatorship, by Communists because it has become capitalist. It promotes a crass and ugly materialism, the very opposite of the spiritual Buddhist monks, who spend their time in prayer and meditation.

When China builds a railway to the Tibetan capital over a thousand inhospitable kilometers, the West does not admire the engineering feat, but sees (quite rightly) an iron monster that brings hundreds of thousands of Han-Chinese settlers to the occupied territory.

And of course, China is a rising power, whose economic success threatens America's hegemony in the world. A large part of the ailing American economy already belongs directly or indirectly to China. The huge American Empire is sinking hopelessly into debt, and China may soon be the biggest lender. American manufacturing industry is moving to China, taking millions of jobs with it.

Compared to these factors, what have the Basques, for example, to offer? Like the Tibetans, they inhabit a contiguous territory, most of it in Spain, some of it in France. They, too, are an ancient people with their own language and culture. But these are not exotic and do not attract special notice. No prayer wheels. No robed monks.

The Basques do not have a romantic leader, like Nelson Mandela or the Dalai Lama. The Spanish state, which arose from the ruins of Franco's detested dictatorship, enjoys great popularity around the world. Spain belongs to the European Union, which is more or less in the American camp, sometimes more, sometimes less.

The armed struggle of the Basque underground is abhorred by many and is considered "terrorism", especially after Spain has accorded the Basques a far-reaching autonomy. In these circumstances, the Basques have no chance at all of gaining world support for independence.

The Chechnyans should have been in a better position. They, too, are a separate people, who have for a long time been oppressed by the Czars of the Russian Empire, including Stalin and Putin. But alas, they are Muslims - and in the Western world, Islamophobia now occupies the place that had for centuries been reserved for anti-Semitism. Islam has turned into a synonym for terrorism, it is seen as a religion of blood and murder. Soon it will be revealed that Muslims slaughter Christian children and use their blood for baking Pitta. (In reality it is, of course, the religion of dozens of vastly different peoples, from Indonesia to Morocco and from Kosova to Zanzibar.

The US does not fear Moscow as it fears Beijing. Unlike China, Russia does not look like a country that could dominate the 21st century. The West has no interest in renewing the Cold War, as it has in renewing the Crusades against Islam. The poor Chechnyans, who have no charismatic leader or outstanding spokespersons, have been banished from the headlines. For all the world cares, Putin can hit them as much as he wants, kill thousands and obliterate whole towns.

That does not prevent Putin from supporting the demands of Abkhazia and South Ossetia for separation from Georgia, a country which infuriates Russia.


IF IMMANUEL KANT knew what's going on in Kosova, he would be scratching his head.

The province demanded its independence from Serbia, and I, for one, supported that with all my heart. This is a separate people, with a different culture (Albanian) and its own religion (Islam). After the popular Serbian leader, Slobodan Milosevic, tried to drive them out of their country, the world rose and provided moral and material support for their struggle for independence.

The Albanian Kosovars make up 90% of the citizens of the new state, which has a population of two million. The other 10% are Serbs, who want no part of the new Kosova. They want the areas they live in to be annexed to Serbia. According to Kant's maxim, are they entitled to this?

I would propose a pragmatic moral principle: Every population that inhabits a defined territory and has a clear national character is entitled to independence. A state that wants to keep such a population must see to it that they feel comfortable, that they receive their full rights, enjoy equality and have an autonomy that satisfies their aspirations. In short: that they have no reason to desire separation.

That applies to the French in Canada, the Scots in Britain, the Kurds in Turkey and elsewhere, the various ethnic groups in Africa, the indigenous peoples in Latin America, the Tamils in Sri Lanka and many others. Each has a right to choose between full equality, autonomy and independence.


THIS LEADS us, of course, to the Palestinian issue.

In the competition for the sympathy of the world media, the Palestinians are unlucky. According to all the objective standards, they have a right to full independence, exactly like the Tibetans. They inhabit a defined territory, they are a specific nation, a clear border exists between them and Israel. One must really have a crooked mind to deny these facts.

But the Palestinians are suffering from several cruel strokes of fate: The people that oppress them claim for themselves the crown of ultimate victimhood. The whole world sympathizes with the Israelis because the Jews were the v