Dalai Lama awarded in US despite China anger
The Dalai Lama was bestowed Friday with a US award for his commitment
to democracy, the latest honor for the Tibetan spiritual leader despite
China’s angry protests over his White House welcome.One day after
President Barack Obama met the exiled monk at the White House in
defiance of Chinese warnings, the National Endowment for Democracy gave
the Dalai Lama a medallion before a packed crowd at the Library of
Congress.
The Dalai Lama was bestowed Friday with a US award for his commitment
to democracy, the latest honor for the Tibetan spiritual leader despite
China’s angry protests over his White House welcome.One day after
President Barack Obama met the exiled monk at the White House in
defiance of Chinese warnings, the National Endowment for Democracy gave
the Dalai Lama a medallion before a packed crowd at the Library of
Congress.
The Endowment, which is funded by the US Congress, hailed the Dalai
Lama for supporting a democratic government in exile and his willingness
to even abolish a centuries-old spiritual position if Tibetans so
choose.“By demonstrating moral courage and self-assurance in the face of
brute force and abusive insults, he has given hope against hope not just
to his own people but also to oppressed people everywhere,” Endowment
president Carl Gershman said before placing the Democracy Service Medal
around the monk’s neck.The Dalai Lama, who fled his Chinese-ruled
homeland for India in 1959, voiced admiration for US and Indian
democracy and said China’s authoritarian system was unsustainable.
“The Chinese Communist Party, I think, did many wrong things. But at
the same time, they also made a lot of contribution for a stronger
China,” he said.The Dalai Lama pointed to the growing interest of many
Chinese in getting rich. Calling himself a Marxist in his support for a
strong social safety net, the Dalai Lama joked: “Sometimes I feel my
brain is more red than those Chinese leaders.”
“Sometimes I express now the time has come for the Communist Party
should retire with grace,” he said in English, laughing that Chinese
leaders would be “furious” at his comments.China earlier protested
Obama’s meeting with the Dalai Lama, saying the United States had
“grossly violated basic norms of international relations” and summoning
the US ambassador, Jon Huntsman.
“The US action seriously interfered in Chinese internal affairs,
seriously hurt the feelings of China’s people and seriously harmed
China-US relations,” foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu said in a
statement.In Washington, State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said
the Dalai Lama’s meetings with Obama and Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton were part of a longstanding US dialogue with the Tibetan leader.
-AFP
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