Author:
Publication: The Times of India
Date: March 23, 2009
URL: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/SAfrica-bars-Dalai-from-peace-meet/articleshow/4305922.cms
South Africa barred the Dalai Lama from a
peace conference in Johannesburg this week, saying Monday it did not want
to endanger the government's relationship with China. The move prompted sharp
criticism from the Nobel Committee, among others.
Thabo Masebe, spokesman for President Kgalema
Motlanthe, said now was not the time for such a high-profile visit from the
Tibetan spiritual leader and added that South Africa hoped to avoid being
``the source of negative publicity about China.''
Instead the barring - technically a refusal
to issue an official invitation - generated negative comments toward South
Africa.
Retired Cape Town Archbishop Desmond Tutu,
who is, like the Dalai Lama, a Nobel peace laureate, and members of the Nobel
Committee canceled plans to participate in Friday's conference because the
Dalai Lama was not allowed to attend.
``It is disappointing that South Africa, which
has received so much solidarity from the world, doesn't want to give that
solidarity to others,'' Nobel Institute Director Geir Lundestad said in Oslo,
referring to the decades-long fight against apartheid.
Masebe said the decision was made last month
and communicated to the South African organizers of the conference, who planned
for Nobel laureates, Hollywood celebrities and others to discuss issues ranging
from anti-racism to sport as a way to bring peoples and nations together.
South African soccer officials organized the
peace conference to highlight the first World Cup to be held in Africa, which
South Africa will host in 2010.
Masebe said the Dalai Lama has been welcomed
twice previously in South Africa, and would be welcome again in the future
- but ``not now, when the whole world is looking at South Africa.''
``We do value our relationship with China,''
Masebe said Monday. South Africa is China's largest trading partner on the
continent. China claims Tibet as part of its territory, but many Tibetans
say Chinese rule deprives them of religious freedom and autonomy. Beijing
accuses the Dalai Lama of pushing for Tibetan independence and fomenting anti-Chinese
protests among Tibetans.
Beijing, an ally when South Africa's now-governing
African National Congress was a liberation movement, and Pretoria have diplomatic
ties stretching back a decade and an economic relationship based on trade
as well as aid.
Samdhong Rinpoche, the prime minister of the
Tibetan government-in-exile, said South Africa was under pressure from Beijing
and its decision to bar the Dalai Lama was a business matter.
``South Africa is a newly emerging country
and China is giving it considerable economic resources so it is understandable,''
he said Monday in Dharmsala, India. ``We understand that every country has
to protect its economic and political interests.''
Masebe insisted his government was not bowing
to pressure from China.
``We make our own decisions,'' he said. Tamu
Matose, a spokeswoman for Archbishop Tutu, told the AP on Monday that Tutu
would not attend the conference ``because of the Dalai Lama issue.'' Tutu
was quoted as telling The Sunday Independent that barring the Dalai Lama was
``disgraceful.''
Masebe said if organizers consulted with government
officials before planning to include the Dalai Lama, they would have been
advised to exclude him and the controversy could have been avoided. But Kjetil
Siem, chief executive officer of South Africa's Premier Soccer League, said
the Dalai Lama was invited as a matter of course along with other laureates.
``When it comes to peace conferences ... it
has nothing to do with the government,'' Siem said.
Siem said the conference was a chance to show
what South Africa has accomplished - and what is possible to achieve with
cooperation.
Soccer was once as segregated as the rest
of society in South Africa, with four race-based leagues. Today, the nation
is proudly united behind the upcoming World Cup.
The controversy over the Dalai Lama, Siem
said, was an indication his peace conference is ``more needed than ever.''