Crisis on the Roof of
the World
John DeMont| August 16,
2017 Lion’s Roar
The repression, surveillance, and propaganda
are Orwellian. Chinese money, immigrants, and tourists are pouring
in. The fight to control religion is heating up. John Demont
reports that China’s long term campaign to assimilate Tibet has
entered a critical new stage.
There was understandable skepticism last March
when Chinese state broadcaster CCTV declared Lhasa “the happiest
city in China.” In 2008, after all, an estimated 140 people had
died in protests in the Tibetan capital on the forty-ninth
anniversary of the revolt against the Chinese takeover. Since then,
148 monks, nuns, and lay Tibetans—as well as eight Tibetans in
exile—have set themselves aflame to protest Chinese rule over their
homeland.
The cheery poll also contrasted sharply with
the news that Freedom House, in its annual “Freedom in the World”
report, ranked Tibet the second-worst place in the world for
political rights and civil liberties. Number one was
Syria.
As propaganda goes, the government-sanctioned
poll seemed woefully transparent. Yet, it said something telling
about Beijing’s current strategy for expanding its mastery over
Tibetan life.
“Their approach has become more
sophisticated,” concedes Penpa Tsering, the North American
representative of the Tibetan government-in-exile. Even if China’s
ultimate aim remains the same: “To assimilate or exterminate the
Tibetans, as a geopolitical necessity,” says Robert Thurman,
professor of Indo-Tibetan Buddhist Studies at Columbia University
and President of Tibet House U.S.
It’s an objective that hasn’t really changed
since 1951, when Mao Tse-Tung’s armies invaded Tibet. China had
long claimed sovereignty over Tibet; now the Communists added the
additional rationale of liberating it from its old, semi-feudal
ways.
Today, Tibet is a vital part of the Chinese
empire, geopolitically and economically. It serves as a buffer zone
between China on one side and India, Nepal, and Bangladesh on the
other. It is a crucial source of fresh water for China’s billions.
The riches beneath the Tibetan plateau—minerals such as copper,
gold, iron, mercury, uranium, and zinc, along with oil, natural
gas, and coal—power China’s cities, factories, and exploding
economy.
China’s grip over Tibet has tightened,
loosened, and tightened again over the decades. Today, Tibet
suffers a level of oppression “unprecedented since the Cultural
Revolution,” says Robert Barnett, director of the Modern Tibetan
Studies Program at Columbia.
In addition to the traditional tools of
Chinese suppression—soldiers routinely unleashed on peaceful
protestors, unprovoked arrests and detentions, nightmarish
re-education camps—Tibetans today face an even greater military
presence and an increasingly Orwellian level of security and
surveillance.
The upshot, according to Human Rights Watch,
is “diminishing tolerance by authorities for forms of expression
and assembly… (which) has led authorities to expand the range of
activities and issues targeted for repression in Tibetan areas,
particularly in the countryside.” There, as in the cities, the
Chinese authorities hope to nip opposition in the bud.
Examples of this approach, which Barnett calls
a sophisticated “management” of dissent, abound. By targeting their
families for persecution, China has curtailed the activities of
activists and dissenters. Threats of severe punishment for families
of Tibetans who light themselves on fire have slowed the number of
self-immolations.
Three years ago, China instituted a “Grid
Management” surveillance system, installing hundreds of police
booths on residential streets. The system is designed to manage
Tibetan society “without gaps, without blind spots, without
blanks,” in the words of state media.
In the same period, reports Human Rights
Watch, some 21,000 government officials have been transferred to
villages and monasteries throughout the Tibet Autonomous Region
(TAR). Thousands of additional police have been deployed in Tibetan
communities, where the “double-linked households system” requires
that party personnel befriend and guide families to adopt Chinese
Communist Party orthodoxy and better themselves
economically.
Consequently, there has been a surge in the
creation of local Communist Party organizations, government
offices, police posts, security patrols, and political
organizations, all designed to keep a watchful eye on the Tibetan
population. The impact has been dramatic: in the past, most
political prisoners were Buddhist nuns and monks. Now, the
persecuted are as likely to be local community leaders,
environmental activists, artists, or just ordinary villagers going
about their lives.
“Surveillance is at an all-time high,” says
Tencho Gyatso, director of Tibetan Empowerment & Chinese
Engagement Programs at the International Campaign for
Tibet.
This is hardly what the Dalai Lama has in mind
when he proposes a “middle way” to secure his people’s
freedom—autonomy within China that protects Tibetans culture,
religion, and national identity. The reality today is the opposite:
cultural and religious self-expression is increasingly suppressed
in a society where government cameras and plain-clothes police
watch over monasteries and public squares, and where scrutiny of
Internet and mobile phone use is widespread.
Escaping the Chinese government’s unrelenting
propaganda campaign is equally difficult. “Tibet,” says Burnett,
“is a propaganda state with a heavy military garrison as its
backup.”
“Old Tibet,” the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
wrote in a 2015 white paper, was “savage, cruel, and backward, like
the dark society of medieval Europe” before the communists embarked
on a “peaceful liberation” of the region. Now the CCP wants the
world to believe that its rule has propelled Tibet from the
darkness into the light.
Mostly, the propaganda campaign focuses on
China’s expansive plan to develop the economy and purportedly
improve the standard of living for Tibetans. Since Tibet’s
annexation, the Chinese government has spent an estimated $100
billion in the region, mostly on roads, train lines, bridges,
airports, and other infrastructure.
Along with the money have come people. The
Chinese authorities claim that Tibet’s Han population numbers some
245,000, a figure that critics call laughably understated. Han
Chinese, both tourists and residents, have been pouring into Tibet
since the first high-speed train line to Lhasa opened in 2006. The
numbers are expected to soar in the future as new high-speed rail
lines come on stream.
As it is, the official Chinese media has
reported that 21 million tourists, almost all of them from China,
visited Tibet in the first three quarters of 2016, compared to
fewer than three million indigenous Tibetans. The government’s
tourism strategy emphasizes secular elements in Tibetan culture and
“red tourism”—the marketing of sites with revolutionary
significance for the Chinese Communist Party.
Critics say that little of this spending is
making it into the pockets of ordinary Tibetans. The nascent
tourism industry and most of the services in the fast-growing
cities are controlled by Han Chinese. Most construction material is
imported from China. Overall, most of the new jobs go to Chinese
immigrants, who now make up 22 percent of the population of
Lhasa.
“It’s all a show, a facade, a house of cards,”
says Tencho Gyatso about the economic development plan. “It is not
there to sustain what is important to Tibetans.”
Instead, she and others argue that the influx
of money and Han Chinese immigrants is marginalizing Tibetans in
their own country—and making Chinese assimilation harder to resist.
Forced resettlement and natural migration patterns are uprooting
hundreds of thousands of rural Tibetans and moving them into the
growing cities, which will soon be dominated by ethnic Chinese,
according to the Tibet Policy Institute.
“In another 40 or 50 years,” concludes Penpa
Tsering, “we could have a Tibet with a Han majority
population.”
The drive for economic development is also
damaging Tibet’s fragile environment. The urbanization push means
rural pastureland is disappearing. Tibet’s rivers—a critical
resource for more than 1.3 billion people in the world’s ten most
densely populated nations—are being dammed.
The Tibetan plateau is heating up three times
as fast as the global average, and as a result, glaciers are
melting at a rate of seven percent annually, causing massive
landslides. At this speed, according to Lobsang Sangay, prime
minister of Tibet’s government-in-exile, two-thirds of the 46,000
glaciers on the Tibetan plateau—the largest concentration of ice on
the planet after the North and South poles—will be gone by 2050,
leading to a release of carbon that will have a catastrophic impact
on global climate change.
Tibet’s culture is no less under attack. In
one glaring example, China has sharply scaled back the teaching of
the Tibetan language as part of its push to encourage the
assimilation of Tibetans into the dominant Han culture.
The assault on Tibetan Buddhism, which the
Dalai Lama characterizes as “cultural genocide,” is far broader.
The famed Potala Palace in Lhasa, traditional seat of the Dalai
Lamas, has been turned into a tourist museum with secular guards.
Buddhist monasteries are strictly controlled. Thousands of
buildings have been demolished and monastics displaced at Larung
Gar and Yachen Gar, two of the largest and most important centers
of Buddhist learning in Tibet over which China has now assumed
control.
The campaign to demonize the Dalai Lama
personally is equally relentless. His Holiness, who fled Tibet
after the abortive uprising in 1959, is derided by Chinese
officials as a “wolf in monk’s robes” and a “splitist” intent on
separating Tibet from its Chinese motherland. His followers are
belittled as the “Dalai Lama clique.”
Foreign leaders who meet with the Dalai Lama
earn Beijing’s scorn, a worrisome prospect given China’s economic
power. Many decline to meet with him at all, or hold only private
meetings. The repercussions of supporting the Dalai Lama are many
times greater inside Tibet, where merely possessing his image is
punishable by years in jail. Earlier this year, Chinese authorities
barred Tibetans—who in 2016 received only a fraction of the foreign
travel visas they were once granted—from travelling to the Dalai
Lama’s Kalachakra teachings in India.
A central instrument in China’s strategy to
curb the Dalai Lama’s global clout is the Chinese-appointed Panchen
Lama, who is being groomed by the government as an alternative to
His Holiness, who turns 83 this summer.
In 1995, the Dalai Lama had named a
six-year-old Tibetan boy living in Tibet as the reincarnation of
the Panchen Lama, Tibet’s second most important religious figure.
Three days later, the boy and his family were kidnapped by Chinese
authorities and have never been seen or heard from again. In his
place, the government installed the son of a pair of Communist
Party members, who this year called on Tibetan Buddhist monks to
love the Communist party.
“The appointment of the fake Panchen Lama as a
political tool is not working,” says Penpa Tsering of the
government-in-exile. But China’s biggest power play is surely
ahead.
The officially atheist government in Beijing
has declared that it will find its own reincarnation of the Dalai
Lama, which would help the CCP further solidify control over Tibet.
In response, His Holiness has said that he will not be reincarnated
in Chinese-controlled territory—“Reincarnation is not the business
of the Communists,” he has said—and for that matter, may not be
reincarnated at all, if that is the will of the Tibetan
people.
Whoever follows may never enjoy the
geopolitical stature of Tenzin Gyatso, the Fourteenth Dalai Lama,
who is venerated as both a secular and spiritual leader and has
personally brought his people’s tragedy into the global
consciousness. But there are other reasons why the “middle way”
goal of cultural and religious autonomy for Tibet within China
remains, in the eyes of many, as distant as ever.
Tsering says that it is hard for the
government-in-exile to move toward a diplomatic solution with a
Chinese government that refuses to recognize, let along negotiate
with, the democratically-elected administration. For other
Tibet-watchers, the government-in-exile has erred strategically by
focusing more on winning over the West than on trying to make
headway with China. Even within the Tibetan diaspora, there is
disagreement on the best way to advance the Tibetan cause, with
some Tibetan exiles backing His Holiness’ notion of autonomy while
others still call for rangzen, or full-blown
independence.
Robert Thurman, though, remains hopeful. The
reason, perhaps surprisingly, is Xi Jinping, the man who runs
China, in the view of the New York Times, “with a firmer hand than
any leader since Mao Zedong.” The political pragmatist seems to
have something of a fondness for Buddhism—at least compared to his
predecessors.
When the Dalai Lama was a young man, he spent
months in Beijing studying Chinese and Marxism. At the end of his
studies, His Holiness presented a watch to one of the Chinese
officials he’d spent time with— Xi Zhongxun, father of the current
leader—who wore the gift for many years afterwards. Xi Jinping’s
mother, a practicing Buddhist, was buried with full Tibetan
Buddhist rites. His wife, a popular folk singer, is also a
practitioner of Tibetan Buddhism in a country where interest in the
faith is increasing.
“Family tradition” and “karma,” says Thurman,
may sway Xi Jinping’s attitude toward Tibet. But geopolitical
realities, more than anything, could be what push China towards a
more accommodating approach. In the long run, China’s iron hand in
Tibet will damage the giant’s ability to utilize its “soft
power.”
“Xi Jinping is the first Chinese president who
can feel the pulse of the world and realize that China has
everything to gain by being a respected, powerful international
player in a harmonious international system,” says
Thurman.
So far, there have been few signs that Xi is
willing to challenge the hard-line CCP leadership on the “Tibet
question.” But Thurman thinks that an opening exists for Xi to
adopt a “loose reins policy” regarding Tibet as the Chinese leader
consolidates power in the coming years.
The question is, how long can Tibet wait? At
the last Kalachakra teaching, the Dalai Lama said, perhaps
jokingly, that he could live another thirty years.
“His Holiness is convinced that his approach
will work in the long run,” says Thurman. “He is just sick and
tired of it being such a long, long run.”