logo
Dalai Lama urges peaceful dialogue with China, reaffirms Tibet's commitment to non-violence and justice

Dalai Lama urges peaceful dialogue with China, reaffirms Tibet's commitment to non-violence and justice

Canada News.Net10 hours ago

Dharamshala (Himachal Pradesh India), June 4 : The Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) reported that His Holiness the Dalai Lama's message for the convention was delivered in Tokyo by Deputy Speaker Dolma Tsering Teykhang of the 17th Tibetan Parliament in Exile during the opening session of the ongoing 9th World Parliamentarians' Convention on Tibet.
Dalai Lama said in his message,
The support of people's representatives is something that I particularly value and is of enormous significance to us Tibetans, while extending greetings to all the attending parliament members from many nations. Today the world is going through very challenging times. Sadly, there seems to be no end in sight to the use of violence in settling problems and disputes between nations and even between opposing groups within individual countries. History shows that violence only breeds more violence. We must therefore make concerted efforts to resolve problems and disputes through dialogue in a spirit of reconciliation and understanding. We Tibetans are committed to seeking a mutually acceptable solution with a peaceful, non-violent path to achieve freedom and dignity for the Tibetan people, stated CTA report.
The message continued,
The spirit of Tibetans in Tibet remains firm like a mountain. Their dedication to our cause is strong, unwavering, and determined as it is based on truth and justice. I am hopeful that the Chinese people will recognise this. Ours is the peaceful struggle of a people with their language, profound philosophy, and rich culture. Tibetan Buddhism is a complete form of Buddhism based on reasoning and logic. It is a tradition that preserves and develops the pure teaching derived from the historic Indian University of Nalanda. Central to this is the cultivation of compassion and concern for the welfare of all being, as quoted by the CTA report.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hong Kong's security net extends beyond arrests as small businesses pressured
Hong Kong's security net extends beyond arrests as small businesses pressured

Winnipeg Free Press

time7 hours ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Hong Kong's security net extends beyond arrests as small businesses pressured

HONG KONG (AP) — It's been years since mass arrests all but silenced pro-democracy activism in Hong Kong. But a crackdown on dissent in the semiautonomous Chinese city is still expanding, hitting restaurants, bookstores and other small businesses. Shops and eateries owned by people once associated with the largely subdued pro-democracy movement are feeling a tightening grip through increased official inspections, anonymous complaint letters and other regulatory checks. Those critical of the city's political changes say it's a less visible side of a push to silence dissent that began five years ago when Beijing imposed a national security law to crush challenges to its rule, under which opposition politicians were jailed and pro-democracy newspaper Apple Daily was shuttered. China said the law was necessary for the city's stability following anti-government protests in 2019. In 2024, the city passed its own national security law, which has been used to jail people for actions like writing pro-independence messages on the back of bus seats and wearing a T-shirt carrying a protest slogan that authorities deemed could imply the separation of Hong Kong from China, a red line for Beijing. In recent weeks, food authorities sent letters to restaurants warning that their business licenses could be revoked if the government deems them to be endangering national security or public interest. Frequent inspections Leticia Wong, a former pro-democracy district councilor who now runs a bookstore, says her shop is frequently visited by food and hygiene inspectors, the fire department or other authorities over complaints about issues like hosting events without a license. It happens most often around June 4, the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre. Her records show government authorities took measures against her shop some 92 times between July 2022 and June 2025, including inspecting her shop, conspicuously patrolling outside, or sending letters warning her of violations. She has been studying regulations to protect herself from accidentally breaking them. 'Some areas look trivial — and they really are — but they still have the power to make you face consequences,' she said. In an emailed reply to The Associated Press, the fire department said it conducted checks at Wong's business following multiple complaints this year. Wong's bookstore passed most of them but still faces enforcement action for failing to provide valid certificates for two fire extinguishers and its emergency lighting system, it said. Other small business owners described similar experiences. A bakery that put up pro-democracy decorations during the 2019 protests saw food authorities' inspections jump from quarterly to monthly over the past one to two years, mostly over labeling complaints. Its owner, who asked to remain anonymous fearing government retribution, said the frequent inspections made running the business a struggle. A restaurant owner who received the notice of the newly added terms on possible license revocation over national security violations said he doesn't know what could be considered a violation and fears one wrong move could cost his staff their jobs. He spoke on the condition of anonymity, fearing potential impact on his business partners and employees. Food authorities said inspections follow the law, information and public complaints. They maintained that the new national security conditions for food business licenses were clearly defined and would not affect law-abiding operators. The Hong Kong Chief Executive's office has not immediately commented. Anonymous denunciations Others say they have lost opportunities after anonymous letters were sent to employers or business partners. Wong said an anonymous letter sent to an organization that had planned an event at her shop prompted them to cancel the booking. Separately, she lost a freelance job after a funder demanded that a social enterprise not hire her without a specific reason. Her landlord also received an anonymous letter warning them not to rent the space to her. 'I feel that this society is working very hard — that is, within the system, under the official system, working very hard to reject me, or to make my life difficult,' Wong said. Chan Kim-kam, another former district councilor, says she lost both a part-time job and a role in a play after the people she worked for were pressured. A school where she taught sociology part-time asked her to leave after it received a letter claiming that she made a student uncomfortable. The letter, which was written in the simplified Chinese characters used in mainland China but less prominently in Hong Kong, included links to news reports about her arrest under the homegrown national security law last year, though she was never charged. Meanwhile, the city's Leisure and Cultural Services Department told her drama group to replace her or lose their venue, she said. 'I think it's really such a pity. When the culture of reporting people has become so intense, it destroys the trust between people,' she said. Cultural authorities, declining to discuss specific bookings, said all their venue bookings were managed under established procedures. Rule of law in question Hong Kong leader John Lee has said the security law upholds the rule of law principle and only an extremely small portion of people were targeted. He noted 332 people have been arrested for offenses related to national security, about 66 each year on average, or 0.2% of the police's annual arrest figures. Still, he warned of persisting soft resistance, saying 'the streets are full of petty people.' Local broadcaster i-Cable News said national security guidelines would be issued to government workers. Secretary for Security Chris Tang told the broadcaster that even a cleaner should report words endangering national security, if any are found during their job. But Eric Lai, a research fellow at Georgetown Center for Asian Law, said Hong Kong is using regulatory powers to monitor and regulate dissent without checks and balances. Local courts were unable to check the powers granted to the government under the security laws, he said. It fits a common pattern among undemocratic governments like mainland China, he said. In many cases across the border, law enforcement officers frequently harass and surveil dissenters without formal charges. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. 'It tells the world that the so-called rule of law in Hong Kong is only a facade of rule by men,' he said. Outside a court on Jun. 12, members of the pro-democracy party League of Social Democrats protested against their convictions over street booth activities with a banner that says 'rule of law in name, silencing voices in reality.' They were fined for collecting money without a permit and displaying posters without approval. The judge said freedom of expression was not absolute and restrictions could be imposed to maintain public order. On Sunday, the party announced it had dissolved, citing immense political pressure and consideration of consequences for its members, months after the city's biggest pro-democracy party announced to move toward disbandment. Its chairperson Chan Po-ying wiped away tears at the news conference. 'In the past, the government said it focused on a small portion of people. Now, it includes various kinds of people in Hong Kong, ordinary residents,' she said.

JINF Report: China and Russia's Strategic Merger
JINF Report: China and Russia's Strategic Merger

Japan Forward

time9 hours ago

  • Japan Forward

JINF Report: China and Russia's Strategic Merger

As geopolitical tensions escalate in multiple theaters, China and Russia continue to strengthen their partnership in ways that contest the existing international norm. A seminar hosted on June 27 by the Japan Institute for National Fundamentals (JINF) shed light on how the two authoritarian powers are tightening their strategic alignment, both in cyberspace and in conventional military measures. Jun Osawa, a senior fellow at the Nakasone Peace Institute (NPI), spoke on the evolving sophistication of China's cognitive warfare capabilities. "Whereas Beijing's central propaganda machine once fed specific narratives that spread through state media and were later amplified by bloggers and influencers on social media, the method is now becoming more Russian-like," Osawa said. One example is the spread of conspiracy theories surrounding the August 2023 wildfires in Hawaii. A Chinese disinformation operation known as Storm-1376 falsely claimed, using AI-generated images, that the United States government had started the fires using an energy weapon. A May 2023 video of a transformer explosion in Chile was falsely repurposed to depict an explosion preceding the wildfires in Maui. Unlike earlier top-down propaganda efforts, this campaign was decentralized. Osawa likened it to Russia's favorite playbook: exploiting societal fault lines with misinformation and synthetic media to stir social unrest. Storm-1376, reportedly linked to China's Ministry of Public Security, has for years promoted content aimed at discrediting the American democracy and political system. In April 2023, the US Department of Justice filed charges against 34 Chinese officials implicated in related influence campaigns. Beijing's growing cyber infiltration activities are also targeting Japan. Citing a February 2024 report by Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto, Osawa described a China-based network of at least 123 fake news websites posing as local outlets in 30 countries. These sites blend genuine news from other platforms and fabricated articles to distort information ecosystems and advance specific agendas. Homepage of a news site flagged by Citizen Lab as likely operated by Chinese bots and designed to mimic a legitimate local news outlet. In Japan, domains like masquerade as local news outlets, reprinting authentic content while slipping in pro-Beijing fake stories. Since April 2024, websites imitating major Japanese news brands such as Sankei Weekly and Yomiuri Daily have appeared to enhance their credibility. "While the viewership of these sites is still low, like Russia, the purpose is to spread the news on social media as if it's from a neutral and credible source," Osawa said. There are also signs of disinformation being used as a geopolitical lever. On June 1, a prominent Chinese military blogger shared an article that falsely attributed a provocative quote to a Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force Commander. In the article, Commander Hiroshi Ito is falsely cited as saying, "If necessary, we will cooperate with Ukraine to launch attacks from both sea and land and recapture the four islands." The Four Islands refer to the Northern Territories, a chain located just off the northeast coast of Hokkaido, which have long been in dispute between Japan and Russia. The four disputed islands in the Northern Territories are Etorofu, Kunashiri, Shikotan, and the Habomai. (©Public Domain) The post, which garnered a whopping 168 million views, appeared just one day after former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's widow, Akie Abe, met with Vladimir Putin. "Given that a photo of Putin and Akie was placed at the bottom of the news site, it was clearly intended to drive a wedge between Japan and Russia," the NPI researcher said. Russian President Vladimir Putin welcomes Akie Abe, the widow of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, to the Kremlin with a large bouquet of flowers. Moscow, May 29 (©Sputnik via Reuters) Another tactic used to influence foreign politics is the "hack-and-leak" strategy. In mid-2022, Chinese hackers released partial itineraries of two Taiwanese national security officials, selectively highlighting their off-duty activities such as shopping and dining. They were intended to manipulate public perception and sow distrust among the Taiwanese public toward their government officials. Notably, Osawa explained that these leaks resemble Russia's interference in the 2016 US presidential election. Two Russian hackers at the time breached the Democratic National Committee's servers and exposed information damaging to the Democratic candidate. Turning from cyber to military cooperation, JINF researcher Maki Nakagawa pointed out that since launching joint military exercises in 2012, the scope and intensity of Sino-Russian drills have significantly expanded. In July 2024, for instance, four Chinese naval vessels transited Japan's Soya and Tsugaru Straits en route to the Bering Sea, waters within the US Exclusive Economic Zone. China's navy presence in US territorial waters dates back to 2015, when its vessels entered for the first time following a joint exercise with Russia. US and Canadian fighter jets intercept Chinese H-6 bombers near Alaska on July 24, 2024. (©NORAD) Joint air patrols are also broadening their scope. In that same month, China's H-6K bomber flew alongside a Russian bomber into Alaska's Air Defense Identification Zone. Before the flight, Nakagawa noted that the Chinese aircraft stopped at Anadyr airport in Russia's Far East, reflecting growing logistical interoperability. "Moscow is effectively providing Chinese forces with access to the northern Pacific, allowing it to pressure America's coastal defenses," she said. In turn, Chinese forces are joining Russian troops in joint drills in the Arctic and the Sea of Okhotsk, regions of strategic importance to Moscow. The Sea of Okhotsk includes the contested Northern Territories. The deepening military cooperation between China and Russia places a heavy responsibility on East Asian democracies. Nakagawa, a former Commander of the Basic Intelligence Unit in the Ground Self-Defense Force, warned that Japan must prepare for a "two-front scenario," with Chinese military forces advancing from both the Sea of Japan and the East China Sea. China's expanding naval and aerial reach, she said, will inevitably complicate America's ability to respond quickly to crises within the First Island Chain. A Chinese Coast Guard vessel with a helicopter taking off near the Senkakus, afternoon of May 3. (©Japan Coast Guard) Compounding these complexities is "China's enhanced nuclear deterrent, backed by its advancing triad capabilities and ballistic missile early warning system," the JINF researcher added. The implication for Taiwan is also significant. While Beijing is unlikely to seek direct Russian military intervention, Nakagawa said it would expect intelligence sharing, anti-access and area denial A2/AD support, nuclear deterrence, and weapons transfers in the event of a potential Cross-Strait conflict. By observing the real-world use of drones and advanced weaponry in the war in Ukraine, China is seeking to draw lessons from its authoritarian ally across a broad spectrum of domains, extending beyond cyber operations. Author: Kenji Yoshida

Dalai Lama urges peaceful dialogue with China, reaffirms Tibet's commitment to non-violence and justice
Dalai Lama urges peaceful dialogue with China, reaffirms Tibet's commitment to non-violence and justice

Canada News.Net

time10 hours ago

  • Canada News.Net

Dalai Lama urges peaceful dialogue with China, reaffirms Tibet's commitment to non-violence and justice

Dharamshala (Himachal Pradesh India), June 4 : The Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) reported that His Holiness the Dalai Lama's message for the convention was delivered in Tokyo by Deputy Speaker Dolma Tsering Teykhang of the 17th Tibetan Parliament in Exile during the opening session of the ongoing 9th World Parliamentarians' Convention on Tibet. Dalai Lama said in his message, The support of people's representatives is something that I particularly value and is of enormous significance to us Tibetans, while extending greetings to all the attending parliament members from many nations. Today the world is going through very challenging times. Sadly, there seems to be no end in sight to the use of violence in settling problems and disputes between nations and even between opposing groups within individual countries. History shows that violence only breeds more violence. We must therefore make concerted efforts to resolve problems and disputes through dialogue in a spirit of reconciliation and understanding. We Tibetans are committed to seeking a mutually acceptable solution with a peaceful, non-violent path to achieve freedom and dignity for the Tibetan people, stated CTA report. The message continued, The spirit of Tibetans in Tibet remains firm like a mountain. Their dedication to our cause is strong, unwavering, and determined as it is based on truth and justice. I am hopeful that the Chinese people will recognise this. Ours is the peaceful struggle of a people with their language, profound philosophy, and rich culture. Tibetan Buddhism is a complete form of Buddhism based on reasoning and logic. It is a tradition that preserves and develops the pure teaching derived from the historic Indian University of Nalanda. Central to this is the cultivation of compassion and concern for the welfare of all being, as quoted by the CTA report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store