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thepeel
Joined: 08 Aug 2004
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Posted: Tue May 08, 2007 7:29 am Post subject: Chinese government relocated 250,000 Tibetans |
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China orders resettlement of thousands of Tibetans
By Tim Johnson
McClatchy Newspapers
ZENGSHOL, Tibet - In a massive campaign that recalls the socialist engineering of an earlier era, the Chinese government has relocated some 250,000 Tibetans - nearly one-tenth of the population - from scattered rural hamlets to new "socialist villages," ordering them to build new housing largely at their own expense and without their consent.
The government calls the year-old project the "comfortable housing program," and its stated aim is to present a more modern face for this ancient region, which China has controlled since 1950.
It claims that the new housing on main roads, sometimes only a mile from previous homes, will enable small farmers and herders to have access to schools and jobs, as well as better health care and hygiene.
But the broader aim seems to be remaking Tibet - a region with its own culture, language and religious traditions - in order to have firmer political control over its population. It comes as China prepares for an influx of millions of tourists in the run-up to next year's Summer Olympic Games.
A vital element in the strategy is to displace a revered leader, the Dalai Lama, now 71, who won a Nobel Peace Prize for advocating resistance to the communist government. The government hopes to replace him after he dies with a state-appointed successor, and in the meantime it's opened the gates of Tibet to greater numbers of ethnic Han Chinese and tightened control of religious activity.
It's pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into road-building and development projects in Tibet, boosting the economy, maintaining a large military presence and keeping close tabs on the citizenry through a vast security apparatus of cameras and informants on urban streets and in the monasteries.
Some Tibetans, including farmers interviewed in the village of Zengshol, say they're happy to be in better quarters than their primitive, ancestral homes of mud brick. In other villages, Chinese escorts prevented a visiting reporter from speaking with residents.
Other than a state media account that proclaimed that "beaming smiles" were "fixed on the faces of farmers and herders" as they built and moved into new housing in what it called "socialist villages," the Chinese news media have given almost no coverage to the forced relocation.
Foreign reporters, under tight strictures that largely prevent them from traveling to Tibet except on once-a-year trips under Foreign Ministry guidance, risk being removed from the region if they openly interview people. This report was prepared while undertaking tourism in Tibet.
The first critical account of the remaking of the Tibetan landscape came from New York-based Human Rights Watch, which quoted Tibetans who fled the country, trekking across the Himalayan mountains into Nepal.
On several trips outside Lhasa last month, a McClatchy reporter traversed 800 miles of roads and witnessed the forced transformation of the countryside.
In the new settlements, cookie-cutter houses line the roads at regular intervals, striking in their uniformity. The settlements varied in size but were mostly towns, larger than the abandoned villages. The red flag of China flew atop every house.
In Zengshol, the faces weren't exactly beaming, but the farmers were reluctant to voice complaints.
Some experts say the relocations have lifted up the impoverished peasantry and could bring prosperity.
"It's created a building boom," said Melvyn C. Goldstein, a social anthropologist and expert on Tibet at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland. "I think it's phenomenally successful, more than I would've believed."
Human Rights Watch's witnesses told a different story. Peasants must take out loans of several thousand dollars to pay for the houses, which cost an average of $6,000, even though annual rural incomes hover around $320 in this deeply impoverished region.
"None of those interviewed reported being given the right to challenge or refuse participation in the campaign," the advocacy group said.
Local officials frequently embezzle allocated funds, the group said, and some land that peasants have vacated is being used for mining and other projects. Farmers who can't repay their bank loans forfeit the right to occupy the homes.
Probably the strongest criticism of the program concerns the way it came about - without consultation or consent. The campaign has come with no public debate, a throwback to past eras when rural people served as pawns on a development chessboard.
Chinese experts said that congregating Tibetans was the only way to provide them with opportunities to break rural poverty in the deep mountain valleys.
"There is no water, no electricity; very cold areas without even grass. It's almost impossible to help them without moving them," said Liu Hongji of the China Tibetology Research Center in Beijing, a government-established research center.
Some outside experts have a different take, asserting that the relocations may generate the kind of social resentment that China is eager to quell.
"There seems to be a lot of dissatisfaction," said Robert Barnett, a Tibet expert at Columbia University. "It's a massive project of social - I don't want to call it engineering - but of forced, heavily regulated social change without normal safeguards of consensus and consultation."
It falls short of Joseph Stalin's "social engineering" which involved uprooting whole peoples within the Soviet Union, such as the Crimean Tatars and the Chechens, and moving them vast distances from their homelands.
There are many arguments the Chinese can make for modernizing the region. One is that new housing will force Tibetans to stop living in the same dwellings as their animals, thereby fighting endemic disease linked to proximity to livestock.
But the downside, which Tibetans refugees in Nepal cited to Human Rights Watch, is that the relocated villagers have no place to keep their animals, which are the main source of their livelihood. They must also walk farther to reach their fields.
In view of the near-collapse of the Chinese health system and the government's inattention to food processing, which has led to a major pet-food scare in the United States and Canada, critics will argue that the health benefits are more window dressing than the central purpose of what they see as largely a drive to assert political control.
There are vast sociological implications to the program.
Goldstein noted that the settling of Han Chinese in Tibet's major cities already has weakened the influence of traditional Tibetan elites. "The cities are a loss," said Goldstein, referring to demography from a Tibetan point of view. "The last hope is to keep the villages intact. If there's a battleground for Tibetan identity, it's in the rural areas."
And the rural areas, at least in appearance on a reporter's 11-day tour, are coming under ever greater Chinese control. |
http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/news/world/17185682.htm?source=rss&channel=krwashington_world |
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Adventurer

Joined: 28 Jan 2006
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Posted: Tue May 08, 2007 5:37 pm Post subject: |
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Nice article.... Obviously, China is causing massive sorrow in Tibet. That's just too bad. I hope something is done about Tibet. I have a lot of respect for their culture. |
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cbclark4

Joined: 20 Aug 2006 Location: Masan
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Posted: Tue May 08, 2007 6:36 pm Post subject: |
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They should rise up and be passive.
cbc |
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caniff
Joined: 03 Feb 2004 Location: All over the map
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Posted: Tue May 08, 2007 6:42 pm Post subject: |
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Where's Richard? He's got the scratch, he should be able to help these people out with the "comfortable housing program". |
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Kuros
Joined: 27 Apr 2004
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Posted: Tue May 08, 2007 6:54 pm Post subject: |
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About as many have been relocated in Beijing in preperation for the Olympics.
My g/f and I went to Mongolia for May Day holidays. The Mongolians are heavily influenced by Tibetan Yellow Hat Buddhism, and have some beautiful monasteries in their country. Anyway, there were pictures of the Dalai Lama not only in the temples, but in several individual gers we visited. It was the first time my g/f had seen the Dalai Lama. |
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igotthisguitar

Joined: 08 Apr 2003 Location: South Korea (Permanent Vacation)
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 2:00 am Post subject: |
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Wonderful. Keep that western investment rolling in ...
Whoo-hooh! Beijing Olympics!
Today Tibet, tomorrow the west
It's all good  |
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thepeel
Joined: 08 Aug 2004
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 6:06 am Post subject: |
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Nothing will come of this. East Turkestan, Tibet and Inner Mongolia must be part of a unified China. Taiwan is the gem in the commie crown, or will be, one day. The "Mainland" must be one. |
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W.T.Carl
Joined: 16 Jan 2003
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 12:19 pm Post subject: |
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And why don't we see massive outpourings in the streets over this? |
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igotthisguitar

Joined: 08 Apr 2003 Location: South Korea (Permanent Vacation)
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 10:43 pm Post subject: |
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W.T.Carl wrote: |
And why don't we see massive outpourings in the streets over this? |
Massive outpourings in what streets?
Where? China? Because you're beaten & sent straight to jail.
Say, this reminds me, where's that 2008 BEIJING OLYMPICS THREAD gone? |
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contrarian
Joined: 20 Jan 2007 Location: Nearly in NK
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Posted: Wed May 09, 2007 11:07 pm Post subject: |
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The PRC should be added to the Axis of Evil as the "evilest".
Boycot the Beijing Olympics. |
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happeningthang

Joined: 26 Apr 2003
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Posted: Thu May 10, 2007 2:03 am Post subject: |
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contrarian wrote: |
The PRC should be added to the Axis of Evil as the "evilest".
Boycot the Beijing Olympics. |
And p*ss off the 21st century's next generation of consumers and the one nation that's capable of causing America trouble outside of nasty rhetoric?
Not when it's easier and lucrative to smile and say nothing of consequence. The PRC are still a totalitarian gang of gits. |
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Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee

Joined: 25 May 2003
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Posted: Thu May 10, 2007 5:47 am Post subject: |
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Silence by the UN. |
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thepeel
Joined: 08 Aug 2004
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Posted: Thu May 10, 2007 8:04 am Post subject: |
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Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee wrote: |
Silence by the UN. |
Of course. The UN only cares about human rights if it is Jews or Americans doing the abusing. It is beyond a joke. There are several places in Africa that should be earning screams from Ban K. Moon every day. Nobody cares cause Yanks and Jooos ain't involved (if only Bush had invaded Zimbabwe, those poor people might get some gawddamned attention for once).
Steyn got it right. The eternal flaw of the UN is that it treats the foreign minister of Syria as equal of a representative of the "people" as it does the foreign minister of Norway. |
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