• Despite previous failure, 2016 =?UTF-8?B?4oCYTGhhc2EgQ29uc2Vuc3Vz4oCZ?=

    From Peter Terpstra@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jul 12 16:02:02 2016
    XPost: hk.politics, soc.culture.china, soc.culture.indian
    XPost: soc.culture.usa, talk.politics.tibet

    Despite previous failure, 2016 ‘Lhasa Consensus’ draws foreign delegates to endorse Beijing propaganda on Tibet

    International Campaign For Tibet ON JULY 11, 2016
    Questionable international endorsements are highlighted by CPP controlled media, while independent observers and institutions
    continue to be denied unhindered access to Tibet

    Over the weekend, Chinese state media circulated a ‘Lhasa Consensus’ as a result of the ‘Development Forum’, held in Lhasa
    on July 7-8 (2016),[1] which emphasized the importance of ‘helping the world better understand Tibet’ – political language for
    endorsement of Chinese Communist Party propaganda. More than 130 researchers, officials and correspondents from over 30
    countries attended the conference last week in Lhasa. The Vice President of the Asia Society, the chief economist of the
    Environmental Defense Fund in the US, a German politician and a French writer were among the participants.

    The Lhasa Consensus this year was worded more cautiously than the previous ‘Consensus’ produced after the first meeting of
    such a group in 2014, when foreign signatories came under fire for endorsing a statement that was hostile to the ‘Dalai Clique’.
    [2] In comparison, the ‘Consensus’ produced last week used a smokescreen of opaque terminology to attract the backing of
    foreign delegates and to convince them that China’s policies, which are having a devastating impact on Tibet’s fragile
    environment, are aimed at conservation of the plateau.

    The International Campaign for Tibet (ICT) is raising questions concerning the integrity of such a forum with individual foreign
    participants of the conference in Lhasa,[3] including a German politician Markus Rudolph from the political party CDU whose
    colleague Michael Brand, a German lawmaker who chairs the Bundestag’s Human Rights Committee, was refused access to
    China in May after he criticized rights violations in Tibet.[4]

    Matteo Mecacci, President of the International Campaign for Tibet, said: “The organization of international gatherings by
    authoritarian governments to gain legitimacy abroad is not a new effort and is a worrying trend aimed at stifling and isolating local
    dissenting views in many countries. The participation of individuals representing international organizations in such events needs
    to be scrutinized, since it fosters the regimes’ propaganda. In the case of Tibet, it is astonishing that foreign individuals
    representing respectable institutions would endorse Beijing propaganda, while hundreds of Tibetan political prisoners are still in jail
    for expressing their views and while Tibet continues to be practically sealed off to all independent observers and institutions, such
    as UN rapporteurs and major international NGOs. Beijing has the economic might to recruit foreign endorsements to its
    propaganda, it is therefore up to democratic governments, free press, think tanks, NGOs and academics to make sure that the
    integrity of an open, transparent and democratic debate is preserved when issues concerning the lives of millions of people are
    discussed. Participating in ‘Potemkin tours’ and failing to raise questions publicly about the information regularly produced by
    independent observers does not contribute to the credibility of such participants or their institutions.”

    The emphasis of the Lhasa Forum was on Tibet’s environment and development, with the language of the Lhasa Consensus
    seeking to convey the impression that its policies are aimed at conservation. The Tibetan plateau, a global climate change
    epicenter which is warming nearly three times as fast as the rest of the world, is the source of the earth’s largest river systems,
    and a critical resource to the world’s ten most densely populated nations surrounding Tibet. But instead of seeking to protect this
    fragile high-altitude environment, China is building multiple dams on all the major rivers running off the plateau, devastating the
    landscape with large-scale copper, gold, silver and lithium mining, and intensifying urbanization. Because water and mineral
    resources are seen as strategic assets by the Communist Party government, Beijing’s policies on Tibet remain exempt from
    genuine debate and enquiry.[5]

    The wording of the Lhasa Consensus was indicative of the authorities’ efforts to convince foreign delegates that the land use
    policies that are having such a devastating impact are aimed at climate change adaption and mitigation. In this political language,
    dam-building on a massive scale is described as ‘water conservation construction’ and the displacement of nomadic pastoralists
    from the ancestral grasslands they have protected for centuries is framed in terms of environmental protection, although the
    opposite is the case. In a disturbing new development, the Chinese leadership is also seeking to gain endorsement from
    international institutions and governments for the creation of national parks on the plateau that are contingent upon the removal of
    nomads from their pastures. Visitors to the Lhasa Forum were even taken on a tour of a relocation site, depicted on state TV.[6]

    Christine Davies, Vice President, Global Partnerships, Asia Society, was among those delegates cited by Xinhua as endorsing
    China’s environmental policies, saying, according to Xinhua: “As we have been informed or reminded through several excellent
    tours and discussions this week, China intends to make sure that the Tibet Autonomous Region is firmly included in its ambitious
    nationwide development effort. The infrastructure development plans here are bold and far reaching.” (Xinhua, July 8, 2016).[7]

    The Consensus states: “Over years of experimentation and practice, Tibet has embarked on a path of development that suits its
    unique conditions and yielded encouraging results.”

    The Global Times, a state media publication in English, did acknowledge that the delegate Daniel Joseph Dudek, chief economist
    of the Environmental Defense Fund in the US, had raised some criticisms as well as “praising Tibet for protecting its
    environment.” According to the article, Mr Dudek had pointed out that some areas of Tibet “have suffered from desertification,
    land erosion and trans-boundary air pollution” and he suggested a scheme known as ‘habitat exchange’ that aims to keep people
    on their land as stewards to protect it, which runs counter to the relocation policies of the PRC.[8]

    The Chinese government has accelerated implementation of policies to displace nomadic pastoralists from the vast Tibetan
    grasslands, a massive social engineering campaign that threatens to eviscerate a sustainable way of life uniquely adapted to the
    harsh landscape of the high plateau. This is despite a scientific consensus in the PRC and beyond that indigenous stewardship and
    herd mobility is essential to the health of the rangelands and helps mitigate climate change.

    Foreign delegates to the last Forum in 2014 also faced controversy, and it is notable that foreigners participating last week must
    have chosen to take part even despite the language last year of the Lhasa Consensus, which included the statement that:
    “Participants unanimously agree that what they have actually seen in Tibet differs radically from what the 14th Dalai and the
    Dalai clique have said. The Dalai clique’s statements on Tibet are distorted and incorrect. Many Western media reports are
    biased and have led to much misunderstanding. Seeing is believing. Participants express the aspiration to introduce the real Tibet
    to the world.”[9]

    The Dalai Lama’s leadership in efforts to protect Tibet’s environment was highlighted last month by U.S. President Obama, who
    was cited in a White House statement as saying that he “Welcomed the Dalai Lama’s leadership on climate change issues, and
    expressed support for the Dalai Lama’s efforts to raise awareness of the importance of limiting global warming, including to
    protect the Himalayan glaciers and the environment on the Tibetan plateau.”[10]


    Footnotes:
    [1] Full text of the Consensus: http://english.cctv.com/2016/07/08/ARTIAoc2iH4o5uSNxYlQBLrD160708.shtml. The forum was
    jointly sponsored by China’s State Council Information Office (SCIO) and the People’s Government of the Tibet Autonomous
    Region, and hosted by the People’s Government of Lhasa.

    [2] ICT report, August 15, 2014, https://www.savetibet.org/foreign-dignitaries-endorse-ccp-tibet-policy-and-attacks-on-dalai-lama-at-lhasa-conference/

    [3] State media coverage at: China Daily 7 July 2016, http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2016-07/07/content_26006440.htm

    [4] Blog by Kai Muller, The Diplomat, May 15, 2016, http://thediplomat.com/2016/05/china-pressures-europe-to-stay-silent-on-human-rights/

    [5] For detailed reporting on China’s policies on Tibet’s environment see ICT’s report ‘Blue Gold’,
    https://www.savetibet.org/new-report-reveals-global-significance-of-tibet/

    [6] July 6, 2016, http://english.cctv.com/2016/07/06/VIDEnv45uMQCrbKuKnNJrOPh160706.shtml For detailed reporting on
    China’s policies on Tibet’s environment see ICT’s report ‘Blue Gold’, https://www.savetibet.org/new-report-reveals-global-significance-of-tibet/

    [7] http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2016-07/08/c_135499112.htm

    [8] Global Times, http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/992977.shtml

    [9] In the UK, journalists had sought to ask Labour front bench spokesperson Lord Neil Davidson of Glen Clova, Shadow
    Advocate General for Scotland, about the views he expressed at the 2014 conference, which countered those of his political
    party. The Chinese state media reported that Lord Davidson agreed with a view expressed at the conference that journalism in
    the Western media feeds off disinformation from the Dalai Lama to misrepresent the situation in Tibet, and that Lord Davidson
    added: “The western media merely write people’s happiness in China’s Tibet and know little about the type of development taking
    place in Tibet.” (China Tibet Online, “Biased western media coverage on Tibet denounced on forum in Lhasa,” posted on August
    12, 2014). The UK Labour Party says it remains “deeply concerned about the human rights situation” in Tibet. British journalists
    were not able to reach Lord Davidson, a practicing barrister in the UK who served on the human rights committee of the Faculty
    of Advocates, for comment.

    [10] White House statement, June 15, 2016, https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2016/06/15/readout-presidents-meeting-his-holiness-xiv-dalai-lama

    http://www.savetibet.org/despite-previous-failure-2016-lhasa-consensus-draws-foreign-delegates-to-endorse-beijing-propaganda-on-tibet/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)