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Dalai Lama's Visit Proves Uncomfortable for President Fox

by Diego CevallosIPS
October 5th, 2004

MEXICO CITY - President Vicente Fox welcomed the Dalai
Lama to Mexico this week -- but he did so from a distance, after deciding
not to meet with the Tibetan Buddhist leader in person.

Analysts say Fox's decision was made under pressure rom China, which views
the Dalai Lama as both a religious puppet" and an exiled political figure
who promotes Tibet's independence from China.

For many observers, Fox's attitude contradicts his claims that he defends
human rights under any circumstances and respects all political positions.
This is the excuse he has used in the past to meet with opponents of Cuban
President Fidel Castro, despite the friction this has caused between the two
governments.

"We welcome the Dalai Lama to our country, a country of values, a country of
families, a country that is working hard to build a better future," Fox said
Monday at a ceremony where new homes were being turned over to low-income
families.

While Fox was delivering his message, the Tibetan religious leader was many
kilometres away, carrying out the activities on the agenda for his visit to
Mexico, which ends Friday.

According to spokespeople for the Mexican government -- which signed a
number of agreements with China in August to bolster relations between the
two countries -- Mexico firmly believes that there is and only should be one
China. In other words, Mexico does not look upon aspirations for Tibetan
independence as legitimate.

For his part, the Dalai Lama commented on Sunday, after arriving in Mexico,
that he does not always meet with the presidents of the countries he visits.
Recognising that a meeting with Fox might be awkward for the country, he
said that it was not a problem for
him, and added that he did not want to cause any problems.

The itinerary for the Dalai Lama's visit to Mexico includes numerous public
speaking engagements, where he will address spiritual matters. Meetings have
also been scheduled with members of the Mexican Congress and Mexico City
Mayor Andrés López Obrador.

In addition, the Buddhist leader will be awarded an honorary doctorate from
the Ibero-American University, a private institution run by the Jesuit order
of the Catholic Church.

China has openly voiced its opposition to any official government contacts
with the Dalai Lama, who is an advocate of Tibetan autonomy as well as a
religious leader.

China occupied Tibet in 1951, and subsequently dismantled its traditional
cultural and religious systems, as well as its feudal agricultural system,
which was replaced with communes.

In 1959, after a failed uprising against the Chinese, the Dalai Lama and his
followers fled to India, where he has lived in exile ever since.

Ren Jingyu, the Chinese ambassador to Mexico, told the local press that the
Dalai Lama "is not only a mere religious puppet, but also a political exile
who backs separatist aspirations," and should therefore not be received in
any country.

Analysts say that to avoid ruffling China's feathers and endangering the
recently signed bilateral agreements, Fox chose not to meet in person with
the Dalai Lama -- who could have been received in his capacity as a Noble
Peace Prize laureate, as some have pointed out.

Nevertheless, this did not stop the president's wife, Marta Sahagún, from
requesting a private audience with the Buddhist leader, who was also greeted
by a number of lower-ranking officials.

In the meantime, while the invitation for the Dalai Lama to address members
of Congress was not cancelled, the reception was given a lower profile, and
the Chinese government was allowed to organise a photography exhibit in the
halls of Congress, which reportedly portrays the followers of Buddhism in a
negative light.

Jorge Castañeda, a former foreign minister in the Fox administration, said
the president made a serious error in refusing an official meeting with the
Dalai Lama. Fox's decision was totally inconsistent with the Mexican
government's traditional respect for independence and for human rights, he
asserted.

Hugo Valdemar, a spokesman for the Catholic Archdiocese of Mexico City,
voiced a similar opinion, saying that the government should have welcomed
the Dalai Lama for his role as a defender of human rights, instead of
"bowing down to pressures from China."

And Marco Antonio Karam, a representative of the Buddhist organisation Casa
Tibet Mexico, said Fox's refusal to meet with the Dalai Lama showed a lack
of political savvy and an inability to grasp the importance of this visitor,
whom Karam called "the world's leading promoter of human rights."

All three observers recalled that when the Dalai Lama visited Mexico in July
1989, he met with then president Carlos Salinas de Gortari (1988-1994).

In the view of Manuel Estrada, a Mexican student who follows the teachings
of Tibetan Buddhism, Fox basically ignored the Dalai Lama's visit out of
"fear of irritating China."

Agreements recently signed between the Fox administration and China are seen
as crucial for alleviating the negative effects on Mexico of the Asian
giant's ever-expanding presence in global markets.

One of the agreements is aimed at fighting the influx of counterfeit
merchandise from China, which has had a serious impact on Mexico.

Others seek to achieve greater balance in bilateral trade, which currently
stands at around 10 billion dollars a year, with Mexican exports to China
accounting for a mere 500 million of the total.

Unlike other Latin American countries such as Argentina, Brazil and Chile,
which have capitalised on the huge Chinese market by supplying raw materials
like iron, soybeans and copper, Mexico has been hit hard by competition from
Asia, particularly with regard to manufactured goods.

In addition, China has gradually come to replace Mexico as the world's
second largest exporter to the United States (Canada remains the first).

Between 2001 and 2003, Chinese exports to the United States grew by 29.4
percent, while Mexican exports rose by a mere 1.5 percent, according to
figures from the U.S. Census Bureau.