Will India Wake Up To Reality?
(by Tenzin Tsundue | Mid-Day | January 17, 2002)
The Tibetan freedom struggle in exile has been more symbolic than
confrontational. In the past 40 years from outside Tibet, all we have
achieved is presenting the real Tibet to the world —
as a country where real people of flesh and blood, with the same ability to feel
pain and anger, live. We have been able to demystify Tibet from the
cliché idea of a land of lamas who walk two inches off the ground.
But the freedom struggle seems to have stopped growing from the
zenith of sympathy we reached when His Holiness the Dalai Lama
received the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1989.
I hear that in Tibet it is difficult to find trustworthy friends.
Every other person may be a spy for the Chinese. They whisk
away freedom fighters in the dark of night and their dead bodies
resurface in the outskirts of the town. Tibetans are a minority in
their country. Tibet reels under a cloud of terror and oppression.
Yesterday, India fell for China when Mao Tsetung came with
"friendship ties", screaming "Hindi-Chini-bhai-bhai", but we all
know they back-stabbed in 1962, when they attacked India.
Today Zhu Rongji is extending "economic ties", screaming
"Chini-buy-buy". We have known the Chinese for long as a difficult neighbour.
We know we are fighting a losing battle, with the world
having given up upon us. We may perish, but for India it will leave
a cancerous wound along its 3,500-km permanent border with China.
Will India wake up to this reality? It is time we worked together for
the independence of Tibet and for a safe and secure border for India.
|