Splittist Dog
"I
want to meet with the public. [If leaders like U.S. President Barack
Obama] are willing to meet me, I'm happy. Otherwise I don't want to
create any inconvenience, that's not my purpose. There's no reason for
disappointment. My main interest or commitment is promotion of human
values."
"It
seems that the more accusations from the Chinese government, the more
popularity for me. When I visit different places, if the Chinese
government remained silent, then the press may not pay much attention.
When the Chinese protest, you pay more attention."
"Norway, a smaller country, you can do more. Norway, a smaller (country), can make a significant contribution. This is my view."
Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama
Dalai Lama stands with chairman of the Norwegian
Nobel Committee Thorbjorn Jagland, right, and deputy chairwoman Kaci
Kullmann Five from the Nobel Peace Prize committee, in Oslo, Wednesday
May 7, 2014. Norway's decision to shun the Dalai Lama during his visit
to Oslo this week has left a sour taste for a country that prides itself
in being a beacon of human rights in the world. Unlike on his previous
visits to Norway, no government officials will meet the 1989 Nobel Peace
Prize laureate and Tibetan spiritual leader, who arrived in Oslo on
Wednesday for a three-day stay. (AP Photo/Heiko Junge, NTB Scanpix)
The
government of Norway decided to opt for caution rather than to publicly
bring notice to themselves honouring the presence in Oslo of the
revered Tibetan holy man, the Dalai Lama. The concern was that China
would be enraged. And enraging China would not auger well for the sale
of North Sea oil to that energy-consumption Colossus. Though China
represents Norway's sixth-largest trading partner, evidently Norway is
so greedy for trade it doesn't much mind trading morals for money.
Its
'morals', however, come into full display at certain times against
certain other countries. Take Israel, for example, whom Norway is in
full throttle of slamming with a robustly sanctimonious
boycott-divestment program, snubbing its former friendly relations with
the Jewish state. And it is past interesting to note that Hanne Nabintu
Herland, a noted Norwegian author and historian of religion had this to
say about her country:
"The degree of anti-Israelism in Norway today on the state level, in the
media, in the trade unions and at the universities, colleges and
schools is unprecedented in modern Norwegian history. The
powerful individuals that have pushed for these negative and biased
attitudes in Norway are today responsible for creating a
politically-correct hatred towards Israel that today portrays my country
internationally as the most anti-Semitic country in the West."
But
setting Israel aside it is at present Norway's treatment of the Dalai
Lama that has been placed under the microscope of detecting craven
cynicism in the affair of shunning personal contact with the spiritual
leader whose self-imposed exile from Tibet was forced upon him by the
Chinese authorities who regarded him as a "splittest", intent on
sundering that ancient country from the geography of China which had
invaded it and claims it as part of China. China values "harmony" and
harmonious relations within China its goal, forcefully hammering down
protest against its human rights abuses.
When
Norway's Nobel committee awarded jailed Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo
the Peace Prize in 2010, China broke off government high-level and
diplomatic contacts with Norway, straining trade relations, disrupting
salmon exports from Norway and pitting the world's second-largest
economy against Western Europe's largest oil exporter. Norway's Foreign
Minister Boerge Brenda last month stated that his country needs "to focus on our relationship with China", and accordingly it would become "difficult to normalize our relationship with China", should the government officially recognize the Dalai Lama.
"Normalize"
relations with China? Does that then mean that China's aggression
toward its South China Sea neighbours, Japan, the Philippines, South
Korea, Vietnam should be overlooked? China, after all, has authorized
its ships to ram and water-cannon Vietnamese vessels attempting to stop
Beijing from setting up a huge oil rig in the South China Sea where
Vietnam claims sovereignty. If the government of Norway is agonizing
over its Nobel committee's choices over which the government has no
control, it might consider returning that privilege to Sweden, and then
it would face no further problems with China over the granting of the
Peace Prize.
The
Dalai Lama's visit to Oslo this week coincided with the 25th
anniversary of his having received the Nobel Peace Prize. When jailed
Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo became a laureate in 2010 it was in
recognition of his struggles for peace within a country whose human
rights record was, is, and will remain for the foreseeable future
abysmal. The Dalai Lama fled his country to preserve his life. Since
then hundreds of thousands of Tibetans have died, resulting from China's
anti-human-rights policies.
Norway
is sufficiently venal to overlook such inconveniences in favour of
currying a place in China's esteem as a reliable trading partner.
Last
year, Zhao Jun, China's ambassador to Norway made it perfectly clear
that no headway could be made without Norway back-tracking in its humble
support of human rights. China's ambassador stated outright that the
Nordic country has a need to proffer the first apologetic move, pledging
never to again cross "red policy lines",
and then the diplomatic freeze that had been imposed on Norway after
the granting of the prize to its jailed dissident would be lifted.
In
quietly chiding the newly (2013) elected government of Norway, the
Dalai Lama was making allusion to his meeting earlier in 2014 with
American President Barack Obama in defiance of the Chinese government's
lodging of a formal diplomatic protest, warning that diplomatic
relations between the United States and China would be deleteriously
impacted. The Dalai Lama pointed out that large country or small, each
makes a choice to uphold human rights or to withhold their support for
fear of losing financial traction.
Norway has established its hypocritical choice.
Labels: China, Human Rights, Hypocrisy, Norway, Trade
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