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Sri Lanka's invite to Dalai Lama has led to an evil Chinese curse falling on Lanka's head: Report

By ANI | Updated: January 22, 2023 19:35 IST

The news about Sri Lanka inviting exiled Tibetan Dalai Lama to visit the country has led to an evil ...

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The news about Sri Lanka inviting exiled Tibetan Dalai Lama to visit the country has led to an evil Chinese curse falling on Lanka's head, according to a report in Sri Lanka based The Sunday Times newspaper.

According to The Sunday Times, it is understandable that China should tremble with even a distant prospect of living incarnate of Tibet's religious oppression visiting a foreign country as it resurrects China's invasion and occupation of the once free mountainous Buddhist Kingdom on the 'roof of the world'.

A top Chinese Embassy official this week told Sri Lanka's Malwatta Chapter's Maha Nayaka that he should not welcome the exiled Tibetan Dalai Lama in Sri Lanka.

He was warned that if the Dalai Lama was welcomed in Sri Lanka, then the nation will have to suffer dire consequences. The warning came during an audience granted to the Chinese mission's Charge d'affaires, Hu Wei by the Malwatta Maha Nayaka at his residential temple.

The invite to the Tibetan Dalai Lama was extended by a senior scholar-monk of Sri Lanka's Amarapura Nikaya (a Sri Lankan monastic fraternity), along with a group of senior monks, when he had met the Dalai Lama at Bodhi Gaya on December 27.

'I invited, hoping that His Holiness' visit will bring blessings to Lanka,' the monk said, as quoted by The Sunday Times.

According to The Sunday Times, it is true that Tibet had a turbulent past and had come under Chinese and Mongolian domination. But from 1913 until Communist Chinese invaded in 1950, Tibet remained an independent state.

The Tibet Press recently reported that China denies Tibet's ancient individual existence, claiming it to be a part of the mainland. The Tibet Press report says that the legitimacy of China's claims is based on an illegal agreement in 1951.

The Agreement on Measures for the Peaceful Liberation of Tibet, also known as the 17 Point Agreement, was signed on May 23, 1951, by a person devoid of legitimate authority to represent Tibet.

According to the Tibet Press, China had pledged to keep Tibet's traditional and religious integrity and local ethnic groups' local practices unhindered. The questioned agreement was signed through coercive means and is devoid of any legal legitimacy, the Tibet Press report read.

Non-compliance with the agreement, however, caused the Tibetan uprising of 1959 which was crushed and also forced the 14th Dalai Lama to flee to India with his followers.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: George HuChinese EmbassyGayaSri LankaThe Sunday TimesSunday times styleDemocraticDemocratic socialist republic
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