Fleeing Tibetans Get Help From Indian Embassy
(IANS | Kathmandu, January 6, 2004)
Tibetans fleeing their homeland to begin a new life abroad
are finding their flight getting a little easier thanks to
the Indian government. Since February 2002, the Indian
mission here has been issuing them special entry permits
to travel to India from Nepal. Though relations between
Beijing and New Delhi have been improving, India continues
to provide travel documents to Tibetan refugees in Nepal
on humanitarian grounds.
This also helps to regularise and monitor the flow of
escapees who would otherwise continue to reach India
illegally. Once they reach Nepal, the refugees contact the
office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
that in turn refers them to the Tibetan Refugee Reception
Centre in Kathmandu. The centre forwards the refugees'
applications to the Indian embassy.
Currently, the embassy has been issuing 15 special entry
permits a day, on an average. Each year, 1,800 to 3,000
Tibetans flee from Tibet, the majority of them heading
for Dharamsala in Himachal Pradesh where the Dalai Lama
has his government-in-exile. Reaching Nepal itself is a
hazardous task for the fleeing groups. They face capture
by Chinese border patrols and in Nepal the government
has on two occasions deported two batches of refugees,
including women and children.
There have also been at least two incidents of Nepalese
police firing on the refugees, killing one person. China
doesn't recognise the refugees. Chinese Ambassador to
Nepal Sun Heping says there are no refugees, "only illegal
immigrants". There have been instances of the Nepalese
government cracking down on Tibetan celebrations, like
the observance of the Dalai Lama's birthday, supposedly
at the behest of the Chinese government.
There were also reports about China trying to close down
the Tibetan Refugee Reception Centre, a move thwarted by
the UNHCR. Indian embassy officials said they were not
governed by Chinese or Nepalese reactions while issuing the
entry permits. "The Indian government has issued certain
specifications and we issue documents to applicants who
meet them," they said.
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