China hopes Dalai Lama can 'return to right path', his team rejects preconditions
The Hindu
China open to discussing Dalai Lama's future if he recognizes Tibet as part of China, a proposal rejected by Tibetans.
China hopes the Dalai Lama can "return to the right path," and is open to discussions about his future as long as certain conditions are met, Beijing said on Monday, a proposal rejected by the Tibetan parliament-in-exile in India.
The exiled leader of Tibetan Buddhism, who turns 90 in July, fled Tibet in 1959 for India after a failed uprising against Chinese rule but has expressed a desire to return before he dies.
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China is open to talks about the future of the Nobel Peace Prize laureate as long as he abandons his position of splitting the "motherland," a foreign ministry spokesperson, Guo Jiakun, told a regular press conference.
Mr. Guo was responding to a request for comment on the death of the spiritual leader's elder brother Gyalo Thondup, who had previously acted as his unofficial envoy in talks with Chinese officials.
Gyalo Thondup died on Saturday, aged 97, in his home in the Indian town of Kalimpong.
The Dalai Lama needs to openly recognise that Tibet and Taiwan are inalienable parts of China, whose sole legal government is that of the People's Republic of China, Guo said, using the country's official name.