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US lawmakers urges President Obama to make Tibet a priority now
Saturday, 20 August 2016 19:28 Yangchen Dolma, Tibet Post International
Washington, D.C. – Seventy-two Members of Congress of the United States
have urged President Barack Obama to formulate "new, creative strategies to encourage meaningful dialogue, protect Tibetan rights, and preserve their unique cultural, religious and linguistic identity" during the remaining
months of his term in office.
This appeal was contained in a letter that was initiated by Congressman
Jim McGovern. The letter also urges the Administration to take proactive
steps to support the Dalai Lama and Tibet. McGovern Leads 72 Lawmakers in
Call for President Obama to Make Tibet a Priority in Final Months in Office.
Congressman McGovern has been a leading voice in Congress pushing for the United States to do more to support reforms that would strengthen human
rights in Tibet. In November 2015, Congressman McGovern joined Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi and other lawmakers on a trip to China and Tibet to
urge Chinese leaders to enact reforms to increase the freedom and autonomy
of the Tibetan people.
"We write to ask that you redouble efforts in support of the Tibetan
people during your remaining months in office. We believe it is critically important to move beyond words to actions," McGovern and House lawmakers
wrote in the letter to President Obama.
"The Tibetan people view the United States as their friend. It is time to
honor that friendship with new, creative strategies to encourage meaningful dialogue, protect Tibetan rights, and preserve their unique cultural,
religious and linguistic identity."
In the letter to President Obama, Congressman McGovern and House lawmakers
call for:
U.S. government officials to invite the Dalai Lama to every event, on
every occasion, where his knowledge and decades of reflections would be
helpful for addressing the world's problems.
U.S. government officials to facilitate the involvement of the Dalai Lama
or his representatives in the global debate on climate change and its
potential consequences given Tibet's fragile environment, rapid warming,
and critically important reserves of freshwater.
The establishment of a U.S. consular office in Lhasa, Tibet to help the
U.S. observe and address the obstacles to freedom of movement that affect
both Tibetans within China, and U.S. citizens, including Tibetan-Americans,
who seek to travel to Tibetan areas of China.
The U.S. government to publicly support the right of the Dalai Lama to
return to Tibet
President Obama to publicly and regularly call for the immediate and unconditional release of all Tibetan political prisoners held by the
People's Republic of China whose cases have been documented by the Congressional-Executive Commission on China.
Enforcement of norms of reciprocity to ensure that senior Chinese officials responsible for restricting the access of U.S. officials, journalists, Tibetan-Americans and other citizens to Tibetan areas of China are themselves restricted in their travel when they are in the United States.
Other members of the state’s all-Democratic House delegation who signed
the letter include Reps. Michael Capuano, Richard Neal, William Keating,
Niki Tsongas, Joe Kennedy and Stephen Lynch.
http://www.thetibetpost.com/en/news/international/5140-us-lawmakers-urges-president-obama-to-make-tibet-a-priority-now
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