Dalai Lama Meets New Zealand Government Leaders
(AFP | Wellington | May 28, 2002)
The Dalai Lama on Tuesday met acting Prime Minister Jim Anderton
at parliament, despite Chinese objections. Anderton and the Dalai
Lama gave each other scarves as gifts, in an encounter 66-year-old
Tenzin Gyatso said was spiritual rather than political.
Anderton and Foreign Affairs Minister Phil Goff met the Tibetan
spiritual leader despite pressure from the Chinese government to
ignore his visit. Prime Minister Helen Clark is in Australia.
Exiled from Tibet, the Dalai Lama arrived here on Monday after
nine days in Australia, where government ministers would not
meet him. While New Zealand has ignored the Chinese calls,
it did cave in to a complaint from the Chinese embassy over an Auckland
banner which contained a political message —
the words "In Exile In Auckland". The banner was taken down.
However, Anderton said the Chinese were showing a new maturity
in their approach to the Dalai Lama. China once took retaliatory
diplomatic action when such meetings took place, he said. "I don't
see any sign that that's going to be a difficulty this time ... the
protest was made, we have heard it," he said. "Our culture and
our society's approach to dissent is different —
we can still have mutual respect for each other.
"We count China as a valuable friend,
a valuable trading partner and a valuable part of the international
community," he said.
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