The Tibetan government-in-exile has cancelled its two events in New Delhi to mark 60 years in exile of the Dalai Lama.
The Tibetan community cancelled the events after the Central government’s discomfort was conveyed to its leadership in Dharamshala, said a report in The Hindu.
The development comes days after the Indian Government sent out a note to senior leaders and government functionaries of the Centre and states to stay away from the events planned by the Tibetan government, so as to avoid raising China’s hackles and help improve its ties with India, reported The Indian Express (IE).
The note had stressed that it was a “very sensitive time” for India’s relation with China.
The Tibetan government in exile has called of an inter-faith prayer at the Gandhi Samadhi in Rajghat on March 31, and a “Thank You India” event scheduled to be held at the Thyagaraj Sports Complex on April 1 will be moved to Dharamsala.
“The Thyagaraj stadium event has been shifted to Dharamsala now and the inter-faith prayer at Rajghat has been cancelled for now,” Central Tibetan Administration spokesperson Sonam Dagpo told The Indian Express on Monday.
The event in Dharamsala will be either held on March 31 or April 1. Ngodup Dhongchung, representative of the Dalai Lama in Delhi, also confirmed to the Hindustan Times that the event has been rescheduled.
“There was no direct message from the government to call off the commemorations, but it was conveyed to our leadership that perhaps these events should not be held in Delhi,” said Tsering Dhondup, spokesperson of the Dalai Lama’s Bureau, confirming the cancellations, reported The Hindu.
However, the external affairs ministry said in a statement on March 2 that there was “no change in India’s position” on the Dalai Lama and “His Holiness is accorded all freedom to carry out his religious activities in India.”
An unidentified Tibetan administration official was quoted in media reports as saying they had planned to host speeches by the Dalai Lama and representatives from the Indian government, politics and academia at the Thyagaraj Sports Complex. “There was also a plan to gift a souvenir, a Dharmachakra, from the Tibetan administration to a representative of the Indian government, as an expression of our gratitude to the Indian government for hosting us for 60 years. But that plan is now being re-worked,” said the official.
Last week, the Indian Express reported that a note was sent out by Cabinet Secretary PK Sinha directing officials and ministers to avoid taking part in events related to the 60th year commemoration in view of a “very sensitive time” in relations with China. The note was reportedly sent at the insistence of Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale.
“Participation by senior leaders or government functionaries, either from the Central Government or State Governments, is not desirable, and should be discouraged,” Gokhale wrote, according to the report.
The move is being seen to be in line with India’s attempt to mend relation with China – after a year of strained relations. China sees Tibet as an integral part of itself and calls the Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of the Tibetans, a “splittist” and a “dangerous separatist”.
March will see visits by two senior Chinese ministerial delegations, while a high-level meeting between New Delhi and Beijing is also expected shortly, as both sides work to restore ties after the 73-day Doklam standoff and other issues they faced in 2017, said a report in The Hindu.