Chinese president hopeful on Tibet talks: Report
President Hu Jintao said he has hopes for a positive outcome between representatives of the Dalai Lama and Chinese officials at talks that began Sunday the first since violent anti-government protests erupted in Tibet in March.
"I hope that the contacts with the Dalai Lama's side from today will yield a positive outcome," Hu told Japanese reporters in Beijing, the Kyodo News agency reported.
Samdhong Rinpoche, prime minister of the Tibetan government-in-exile based in Dharmsala, India, said the envoys have arrived in the southern city of Shenzhen and talks began Sunday morning. He said he didn't know any other details.
The talks were scheduled to last for a day or two, he said.
"We are positive that something good will come out of it," Samdhong Rinpoche told The Associated Press.
A report by China's official Xinhua News Agency confirmed the Dalai Lama's envoys, Lodi Gyari and Kelsang Gyaltsen, would meet with two vice ministers of the United Front Work Department, Zhu Weiqun and Sita, who are designated to deal with influential people in groups outside China's Communist Party.
The meeting location was not announced but a large group of reporters from Japan and Hong Kong were staking out a gated development of villas where high-ranking leaders are known to stay in a leafy suburb of Shenzhen.
The Dalai Lama's representatives planned to push for an easing of tensions in Tibetan areas of China and address Beijing's accusations that the spiritual leader has been masterminding the recent unrest, Samdhong Rinpoche told a public rally in Dharmsala.
"Our hopes are high, but this is just a small step in a long process," he said.
The Tibetan government-in-exile has called the meetings "informal talks with representatives of the Chinese leadership."
- 1 End of low-cost flying? JetLite, Air Deccan to be phased out soon
- 2 Brad Pitt with two sons at the Venice Film Festival
- 3 Inflation eases to 12.40 percent; "early signs of moderation" seen, says FinMin
- 4 BSE Sensex sheds 248 points on inflation concerns
- 5 Charlize Theron at the screening of the film "Valentino"
- 6 Hindu mobs run amok in Orissa, burn churches, villages
- 7 ONGC upstages Chinas Sinopec to acquire Imperial Energy for £1.4 billion
- 1 Currency futures trading kicks off in India
- 2 India's economic growth slips to 7.9 percent in Q1 FY09
- 3 Currency Futures: Trading and Profiting
- 4 Inflation eases to 12.40 percent; "early signs of moderation" seen, says FinMin
- 5 End of low-cost flying? JetLite, Air Deccan to be phased out soon
- 6 ONGC upstages China's Sinopec to acquire Imperial Energy for £1.4 billion
- 7 Infosys Technologies buys UK-based Axon for £407.1 million, aims to become leading SAP service provider
- 1 Christians seek refuge from religious persecution in Orissa
- 2 Pakistan's next president: Mr. 10 Percent?
- 3 First black presidential nominee, Obama says "I will renew America"
- 4 Hindu mobs run amok in Orissa, burn churches, villages
- 5 Rat meat in demand in Cambodia as inflation bites
- 6 2 hijackers of Darfur plane surrender in Libya 21
- 7 Dalai Lama, battling exhaustion, cancels trips
|
|
















Pentagon worried by China in space and cyberspace


