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Dalai Lama Says No Role For China In Picking Heir

Dharmsala, Jul 1: The Dalai Lama said on Friday that China's Communist leadership can play no role in deciding who succeeds him as the leader of Tibetan Buddhism upon his death and called Beijing's meddling

PTI Published : Jul 01, 2011 19:21 IST, Updated : Jul 01, 2011 19:22 IST
dalai lama says no role for china in picking heir
dalai lama says no role for china in picking heir

Dharmsala, Jul 1: The Dalai Lama said on Friday that China's Communist leadership can play no role in deciding who succeeds him as the leader of Tibetan Buddhism upon his death and called Beijing's meddling in the issue "a disgrace."


The Nobel Peace laureate turns 76 next week and has begun preparing his people for his eventual death in hopes of preventing his homeland's Chinese rulers from taking advantage of the leadership vacuum.

The Dalai Lama, whose predecessors ruled Tibet as god-kings for four centuries, gave up his role as Tibet's political leader in favor of an elected exile government in May.

He has said the next Dalai Lama -- who would be the 15th incarnation of the spiritual leader -- will be born in exile and even floated the idea of choosing his own successor while still alive.

Beijing, which hopes the Tibetan national movement will fizzle with his death, has responded by insisting the Dalai Lama will be reincarnated in Chinese-controlled Tibet and accusing the current Dalai Lama of violating religious tradition.

"One thing I want to make clear, as far as my own rebirth is concerned, the final authority is myself and no one else, and obviously not China's Communists," he told The Associated Press in an interview.

"This is a religious matter," he said, pointing out that China's atheist Communists don't believe in reincarnation, so can't decide a matter based in that belief.

"It's a disgrace to see that they want to control that," he said. "They've become mad by political power."

China claims Tibet has been its territory for centuries, although many Tibetans say it was effectively independent for most of that time. The Dalai Lama fled into exile amid an abortive uprising against Chinese rule in 1959, nine years after Communist forces entered the Himalayan region.

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