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India backs Dalai Lama's position on successor, contradicting China

India backs Dalai Lama's position on successor, contradicting China

Reutersa day ago
DHARAMSHALA, India, July 4 (Reuters) - A senior Indian minister has said that only the Dalai Lama and the organization he has set up have the authority to identify his successor as the spiritual head of Tibetan Buddhism, in a rare comment contradicting rival China's long-held position.
The Dalai Lama, who fled to India in 1959 after a failed uprising against Chinese rule, said on Wednesday that upon his death he would be reincarnated as the next spiritual leader and that only the Gaden Phodrang Trust would be able to identify his successor. He previously said the person will be born outside China.
Beijing says it has the right to approve the Dalai Lama's successor as a legacy from imperial times.
Kiren Rijiju, India's minister of parliamentary and minority affairs, made a rare statement on the matter on Thursday, ahead of visiting the Dalai Lama's base in the northern Indian town of Dharamshala for the religious leader's 90th birthday on Sunday.
"No one has the right to interfere or decide who the successor of His Holiness the Dalai Lama will be," Indian media quoted Rijiju as telling reporters.
"Only he or his institution has the authority to make that decision. His followers believe that deeply. It's important for disciples across the world that he decides his succession."
India's foreign ministry did not respond to a request for comment on the Dalai Lama's succession plan.
Rijiju, a practising Buddhist, will be joined by other Indian officials at the birthday celebrations.
India is estimated to be home to tens of thousands of Tibetan Buddhists who are free to study and work there. Many Indians revere the Dalai Lama, and international relations experts say his presence in India gives New Delhi a measure of leverage with China.
Relations between India and China nosedived after a deadly border clash in 2020 but are slowly improving now.
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The Dalai Lama says he hopes to live more than 130 years ahead of 90th birthday
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The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

The Dalai Lama says he hopes to live more than 130 years ahead of 90th birthday

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Inside China's horrifying torture jails from gang-rape, human experiments and organ harvesting to inmates having nails ripped out and limbs bent back on notorious 'tiger chairs'
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timean hour ago

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Inside China's horrifying torture jails from gang-rape, human experiments and organ harvesting to inmates having nails ripped out and limbs bent back on notorious 'tiger chairs'

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Dalai Lama says he hopes to live for another 40 years
Dalai Lama says he hopes to live for another 40 years

Reuters

time4 hours ago

  • Reuters

Dalai Lama says he hopes to live for another 40 years

DHARAMSHALA, India, July 5 (Reuters) - The elderly Dalai Lama on Saturday said that he hopes to live for another 40 years until he is about 130 years old, days after he sought to allay speculation over his succession by saying he would reincarnate upon his death. The Tibetan Buddhist spiritual leader was speaking during a ceremony organised by his followers to offer prayers for his long life, ahead of his 90th birthday on Sunday. The Dalai Lama previously told Reuters in December he might live to 110.

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