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Author Topic: Ultimate Hypocricy: Bush to give Dalai Lama medal, China is pissed off  (Read 770 times)
Dig
All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man.
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« on: October 16, 2007, 07:39:39 AM »

Bush set for talks with Dalai Lama amid Chinese anger
http://rawstory.com/news/afp/Bush_set_for_talks_with_Dalai_Lama__10162007.html
Published: Tuesday October 16, 2007

US President George W. Bush prepared to host talks with the Dalai Lama Tuesday, drawing Chinese warnings that the high-profile visit could seriously undermine bilateral relations. Bush is to meet the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader at his White House residence rather than the office, apparently to avoid the full wrath of China -- a move that did not stop China from warning that the meeting would damage bilateral ties. "We express strong dissatisfaction and our firm opposition. This action will seriously undermine China-US relations," foreign ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said in Beijing on Tuesday. Beijing called on Bush to cancel the meeting.

"We have already made many representations to the American side and we would like to again prompt the American side to correct the mistakes and to cancel the arrangements," the spokesman said. It is the third encounter between the US president and the 72-year-old religious figure, who China considers a dangerous separatist, since Bush took office in January 2001, US officials said. Bush is also scheduled to attend a ceremony at the US Capitol on Wednesday, where the Dalai Lama is to receive the Congressional Gold Medal, a top US civilian award. It will be the first time a sitting US president will appear in public with the Dalai Lama, whose arrival in Washington Monday was greeted by a crowd of Tibetans clad in traditional dress, honoring the spiritual icon with blessings, songs and dances. Beijing has protested over the Congressional award, which it said "seriously interfered in China's internal affairs and damaged China-US relations."

Moving swiftly to show its displeasure, China sought postponement of a meeting -- coincidentally also scheduled Wednesday -- among top officials from the five UN Security Council permanent members and Germany in Berlin aimed at discussing the Iranian nuclear crisis, a US State Department official said. "I think they (the Chinese) had indigestion ... over the presence of certain spiritual leaders and an event in Congress," said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity. "It is extraneous to Iranian issues." Beijing "just decided that Wednesday is not the date to have that meeting" among diplomats from Britain, China, France, Russia, the United States and Germany, the official said. "For us, the Dalai Lama is a spiritual leader and that is how he is being treated here," added the official. The six powers were to have discussed calls to tighten UN sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program. China and Russia have been against harsh Security Council sanctions on Iran, which has refused to abide by the powerful world's body's order to the Islamic republic to suspend uranium enrichment.

Tehran insists its atomic drive is entirely peaceful and solely aimed at generating energy. Beijing's fury over the Dalai Lama's US trip came barely a month after it strongly protested German Chancellor Angela Merkel's historic meeting with the spiritual leader in Berlin. China pulled out of a Germany-China symposium last month in Munich and axed an annual event scheduled for December in Beijing to discuss human rights. The Dalai Lama, the 1989 Nobel Peace Prize winner, also met Austrian Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer last month and Australian Prime Minister John Howard in June. He will meet Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper this month. Bush has asked Chinese leaders to have a dialogue with the Dalai Lama to resolve the longstanding issue but they have not budged.

"We hope President Bush's meeting with the Dalai Lama will send a clear message to the Chinese government to reach out to the Dalai Lama, who is acknowledged as a great man of peace, rather than shutting him out," said Kate Saunders, spokeswoman for the International Campaign for Tibet. China has ruled Tibet since sending troops in to "liberate" the Himalayan region in 1950. The Dalai Lama fled to India following a failed uprising in 1959 after Beijing crushed the revolt in Lhasa, and currently lives in the northern hill town of Dharamsala, which is also the seat of his government in exile. Beijing considers the Dalai Lama a political exile bent on establishing an independent Tibet, an accusation he has repeatedly denied. He instead says he only wants greater autonomy and is waging a non-violent campaign for greater rights for his six million people.
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
Rock
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« Reply #1 on: October 16, 2007, 09:53:23 AM »

Lets see..........the government is going to upset China, Russia, Iran.............and who else?




Rock
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Rock
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« Reply #2 on: October 16, 2007, 09:55:36 AM »



http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,302098,00.html



TEHRAN, Iran —  Russian leader Vladimir Putin met his Iranian counterpart Tuesday and implicitly warned the U.S. not to use a former Soviet republic to stage an attack on Iran. He also said nations shouldn't pursue oil pipeline projects in the area if they weren't backed by regional powers.

At a summit of the five nations that border the inland Caspian Sea, Putin said none of the nations' territory should be used by any outside countries for use of military force against any nation in the region. It was a clear reference to long-standing rumors that the U.S. was planning to use Azerbaijan, a former Soviet republic, as a staging ground for any possible military action against Iran.

"We are saying that no Caspian nation should offer its territory to third powers for use of force or military aggression against any Caspian state," Putin said.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also underlined the need to keep outsiders away from the Caspian.

"All Caspian nations agree on the main issue — that all aspects related to this sea must be settled exclusively by littoral nations," he said. "The Caspian Sea is an inland sea and it only belongs to the Caspian states, therefore only they are entitled to have their ships and military forces here."
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Putin, whose trip to Tehran is the first by a Kremlin leader since World War II, warned that energy pipeline projects crossing the Caspian could only be implemented if all five nations that border the Caspian support them.

Putin did not name any specific country, but his statement underlined Moscow's strong opposition to U.S.-backed efforts to build pipelines to deliver hydrocarbons to the West bypassing Russia.

"Projects that may inflict serious environmental damage to the region cannot be implemented without prior discussion by all five Caspian nations," he said.

Other nations bordering the Caspian Sea and in attendance at the summit are: Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan.

The legal status of the Caspian — believed to contain the world's third-largest energy reserves — has been in limbo since the 1991 Soviet collapse, leading to tension and conflicting claims to seabed oil deposits.

Iran, which shared the Caspian's resources equally with the Soviet Union, insists that each coastal nation receive an equal portion of the seabed. Russia, Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan want the division based on the length of each nation's shoreline, which would give Iran a smaller share.

Putin's visit took place despite warnings of a possible assassination plot and amid hopes that a round of personal diplomacy could help offer a solution to an international standoff on Iran's nuclear program.

Putin's trip was thrown into doubt when the Kremlin said Sunday that he had been informed by Russian intelligence services that suicide attackers might try to kill him in Tehran, but he shrugged off the warning.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini dismissed reports about the purported assassination plot as disinformation spread by adversaries hoping to spoil good relations between Russia and Iran.

Putin has warned the U.S. and other nations against trying to coerce Iran into reining in its nuclear program and insists peaceful dialogue is the only way to deal with Tehran's defiance of a U.N. Security Council demand that it suspend uranium enrichment.

"Threatening someone, in this case the Iranian leadership and Iranian people, will lead nowhere," Putin said Monday during his trip to Germany. "They are not afraid, believe me."

Iran's rejection of the council's demand and its previous clandestine atomic work has fed suspicions in the U.S. and other countries that Tehran is working to enrich uranium to a purity usable in nuclear weapons. Iran insists it is only wants lesser-enriched uranium to fuel nuclear reactors that would generate electricity.

Putin's visit to Tehran is being closely watched for any possible shifts in Russia's carefully hedged stance in the nuclear standoff.

The Russian president underlined his disagreements with Washington last week, saying he saw no "objective data" to prove Western claims that Iran is trying to construct nuclear weapons.

Putin emphasized Monday that he would negotiate in Tehran on behalf of the five permanent U.N. Security Council members — United States, Russia, China, Britain and France — and Germany, a group that has led efforts to resolve the stalemate with Tehran.

In Washington, State Department spokesman Tom Casey said the U.S. government expected Putin to "convey the concerns shared by all of us about the failure of Iran to comply with the international community's requirements concerning its nuclear program."

Putin's schedule also called for meetings with Ahmadinejad and the Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

While the Kremlin has shielded Tehran from a U.S. push for a third round of U.N. sanctions, Iran has voiced annoyance about Moscow's foot-dragging in building a nuclear power plant in the southern port of Bushehr under a $1 billion contract.

Russia warned early this year that the plant would not be launched this fall as planned because Iran was slow in making payments. Iranian officials have angrily denied any payment arrears and accused the Kremlin of caving in to Western pressure.

Moscow also has ignored Iranian demands to ship fuel for the plant, saying it would be delivered only six months before the Bushehr plant goes on line. The launch date has been delayed indefinitely amid the payment dispute.

Any sign by Putin that Russia could quickly complete the power plant would embolden Iran and further cloud Russia's relations with the West. But analysts said Putin's trip would be important for Iran even if it yielded no agreements.
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