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         Tibet Government:     more books (98)
  1. A new Tibet policy by Raghavan N Iyer, 1962
  2. Population transfer and the survival of the Tibetan identity (Special report series / U.S. Tibet Committee) by M. C. van Walt van Praag, 1986
  3. One Hundred Thousand Moons: A Political History of Tibet (Library of Tibet) by Shakabpa Wang-Chung-Day-Den, 1998-03
  4. The true story of Maoist revolution in Tibet by Mike Ely, 1994
  5. Aristocracy and government in Tibet, 1728-1959 (Rome Oriental series, 45) by Luciano Petech, 1973
  6. The question of Tibet: V.K. Krishna Menon's statement in the United Nations, 1959 by V. K Krishna Menon, 1959
  7. Tibet, China and the United States: Reflections on the Tibet question (Occasional paper / The Atlantic Council of the United States) by Melvyn C Goldstein, 1995
  8. Tibet: Disputed facts about the situation in Ti[bet] (CRS report for Congress) by Kerry B Dumbaugh, 1988
  9. Tibet: Tradition vs. reform by George Moseley, 1965
  10. Tibet
  11. The history of Tibetan resistance to the Chinese occupation of Tibet 1950-1988 by Kirsten E Rutnik, 1988
  12. Tibet, China, and the 107th Congress: Issues for U.S. policy (CRS report for Congress) by Kerry Dumbaugh, 2002
  13. China's borderlands: Japanese activity in Tibet, 1910-1920 (Conference on the History of the Republic of China) by Paul Hyer, 1981
  14. Five point peace plan for Tibet: Strasbourg proposal, June 15, 1988 by Bstan-ʾdzin-rgya-mtsho, 1988

61. Exile Government Not Involved With Founding Of Taiwan Tibet Group Says PM
With six months to go for the new leadership of China to come forward for dialogueon tibet issue, he said that exile government has given it s fullest co
http://www.timesoftibet.tibetsearch.com/artman/publish/article_823.shtml
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Weather Lhasa New Delhi Kathmandu New York Tibet News Exile Government not involved with founding of Taiwan Tibet group says PM By WTN Feb 3, 2003, 07:29 Email this article Print this article DHARAMSALA, February 2 - Prof. Samthong Rinpoche, the Prime Minister of Exile Government said that the Exile government has nothing to do with the founding of Taiwan Tibet Exchange Foundation . Taiwan Tibet Exchange Foundation is founded by purely a Taiwanese Non Governmental Organization and we have nothing to do with it the Foundation... he said. With the founding of Taiwan Tibet Exchange Foundation, it hopes to strengthen and improve the ties between common Taiwanese people and Tibetan people of their daily religious and cultural life. Until now, there was no such agency who particularly looks for Tibetans and for Tibet issue. And through this foundation Tibetans might be able to reach to the Taiwanese people and to have easy access to Taiwan for relations and various purposes, he added.

62. Tibet
To arouse people's consciousness about family planning, tibet's government has providedpeople with information, education and communication (IEC) on family
http://www.unescap.org/pop/database/chinadata/tibet.htm
Tibet
I. Basic Data
1. Name: Tibet Autonomous Region 2. Area: 12.284 million square kilometers 3. Population: 2.62 million (the 2000 population census) 4. Capital: Lhasa 5. Geography: Tibet Autonomous Region, as the main part of the Qinghai-Xizang Plateau, is located in the southwestern border area of China between east longitude 78° 25' - 90° 06' and north latitude 26° 50' - 36° 53'. It has a common boundary with some other provinces or autonomous regions such as Yunnan, Sichuan, Qinghai and Xinjiang. It is bounded on the west by the Kashmir Zone, and borders on some countries and areas in South and Southeast Asia, namely Myanmar (Burma), India, Bhutan, Sikkim and Nepal. 6. Natural Resources: Tibet has a diversified physiognomy, with mountains, desert, grassland and forests, and is one of the largest grassland and forest areas in China. But its soil resources are unevenly distributed. Tibet has a large quantity of plants and animals resources. Numerous rivers and lakes produce 2 billion-kilowatts of electricity, accounting for 30% of the whole country's output. There is considerable terrestrial, solar and wind energy. Up to 90 kinds of mineral resources have been discovered, and 30 kinds of them have proven reserves, but the province has difficulty in exploiting the potential deposits. Additionally, Tibet is rich in tourism resources. 7. Economy:

63. Central Government Aids Boost Economy In Tibet
Central government Aids Boost Economy in tibet The great efforts thecentral government of China has exerted to help tibet develop
http://un.fmprc.gov.cn/eng/11768.html
Central Government Aids Boost Economy in Tibet
The great efforts the central government of China has exerted to help Tibet develop its economy over the past decades have produced encouraging results.
From the urban areas to rural areas, and from government departments to temples, the majority of the 2.6 million people in the Tibet Autonomous Region, known as the "roof of the world" now have access to TV programs, radio services and electricity, and some of the Tibetans have bought their own cars, mobile phones and other modern telecommunications tools.
The central government and the local governments of other provinces and autonomous regions of China have given support to Tibet over the past several decades in the economic and technological sectors, which has laid a solid foundation for the economic development in the region with the most abominable natural conditions of the country.
Starting from 1996, the Chinese ministries and provinces have given free assistance to help Tibet build 62 key projects, which cover agriculture, animal husbandry, forestry, communications, energy resources, postal services and telecommunications. More than 70 percent of these projects are urgently needed in the region.

64. SIDEBAR: Blood And Tears In Tibet - Christianity Today Magazine
tibetan government in exileis tibet's official site, with sections on recent news,the present situation in tibet, government information, and tibetan culture.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2001/008/18.70.html
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Corner Marilyn Chandler McEntyre Frederica Mathewes-Green Reflections var zcode = " " document.write(zcode)

65. Tibetan Community
News, The Status of tibet, government of tibet, tibetan Culture, Teachings andGuidelines, How you can help (The Office of tibet, London) - www.tibet.com.
http://www.dharamsalanet.com/links/tibetan.htm
Tibetan Community Arts and Culture E-zines and Books Computers, Radio and Films ... His Holiness the Dalai Lama's Home-Pages Site dedicated to creating awareness of the life and work of H.H. Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet: The Office of Tibet and the Tibetan Government-in-Exile - www.dalailama.com TibetNet "Virtual Homeland" - The Official Multilingual Web Site of the Tibetan
Government-in-Exile of H.H. the Dalai Lama - www.tibet.net The Government of Tibet-in-Exile News, The Status of Tibet, Government of Tibet, Tibetan Culture, Teachings and Guidelines, How you can help - (The Office of Tibet, London) - www.tibet.com Xizang-Zhiye 'Xizang-Zhiye' means 'Tibet Pages' in Mandarin Chinese. This site was created at the request of His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama as a way of communicating with Chinese people throughout the world - www.xizang-zhiye.org Tibetan Youth Congress TYC News, Activities, Rangzen, Archives and Support, Facts about Tibet and Campaigns - www.tibetanyouthcongress.org/ Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy Established in response to a need for effective monitoring of the human rights situation in Tibet and the promotion of democracy in the Tibetan community - www.tchrd.org

66. Tibet - A Nation Displaced: Government-In-Exile
government will supervise the settingup of a freely-elected Constituent Assemblywhich will determine the future form of government for free tibet.
http://journalism.uts.edu.au/subjects/oj1/oj1_a2002/Tibet/govinexile1.html
TIBET - A Nation Displaced Home The History of Tibet The Dalai Lama The Present Situation: The Tibetan Community: The Struggle Today

A Government in exile
by Chiara Pazzano
1. The Formation of Government-in-Exile
2. The Three Pillars of the Democratic Government
The Formation of the Government in Exile
When Tibet was invaded by Chinese troops in 1959, the Dalai Lama fled Tibet. He escaped and established the Tibetan Government in Exile in Dharamsala, in Northern India.
He was followed into exile by 80,000 Tibetans, who settled in India, Nepal and Bhutan. Those who found their way over the Himalaya, with very little food and shelter, had no possessions or support when they arrived, and they had to adapt to the hot Indian climate and altitude. Many Tibetans perished from these factors.
Although some Tibetans have also moved to other countries, including the West, India remains the most important home of the Tibetan exile communities today. The influx of refugees continues even today. Currently, the number of refugees, including those born in exile, totals 122,078.

67. Foundation For Religious Freedom Initials Foundation For
The Dalai Lama wants to go back very much, Thupten Samphel, a spokesmanfor tibet's government, said yesterday. It is every tibetan's
http://www.forf.org/news/2003/talklama.html
I NTERFAITH E TIQUETTE ... Contact Us
"Beijing in talks on Dalai Lama's return"
by Luke Harding and Bharati Puri ("The Guardian," February 8, 2003)
Secret negotiations between China and the Dalai Lama will resume next month, amid growing signs that Tibet's spiritual leader is preparing to cut a historic deal allowing him to return to Tibet after almost half a century in exile. Several of his senior envoys will travel to Beijing next month, the Guardian has learned. The delegation from Tibet's India-based government is expected to discuss the circumstances under which the Chinese government would allow the Dalai Lama to visit Lhasa, Tibet's capital. Since he fled Tibet in 1959, the Dalai Lama has been regularly denounced by Beijing as a "splittist" (separatist) traitor. But relations between the two sides have recently thawed. Last September two of the Dalai Lama's envoys went to China for the first direct negotiations with the communist regime in 20 years. Tibet's exiled leadership is now hopeful that China's new president, Hu Jiantao, who takes over in March, will abandon Beijing's hardline position on Tibet, and usher in a period of constructive change.

68. Tibet Daily - Latest News Stories And Top Headlines From Tibet.
become a global platform for opponents and s Full Story tibet builds 'hopes'on China Gulf Daily News DHARAMSALA, tibet The tibetan governmentin-exile
http://www.tibetglobe.com/
ASIA PACIFIC POLITICS AIDS EXPLORE ASIA ... RADIO TIBET RELATED SITES Tibetan World Tibetan Bulletin World Tibet Day Free Tibet Campaign ... Independent Tibet Network
TIBETAN HISTORY Demton Khang History of Tibet Tibetan Art History
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Fri, 11 Apr 2003 East Asia Southeast Asia WN Asia Central Asia ... U.S. withholds China resolution at rights conference
In a departure, the United States has decided against introducing a resolution criticizing rights abuses in China at the annual meeting of the UN Human Rights Commission, a State Department official said Friday. The decision comes two weeks after the annual State Department human rights report had cited continuing abuses in China. (Xinhua photo)...
China
Human Rights UN US ...
World's longest epic keeps growing
The Life of King Gesar, a Tibetan heroic tale and the world's longest epic, is becoming longer, according to Gesarologists. (Xinhua )... Lifeinsurance China Tibetdaily India ... Next 20 POLITICS Tibetan Lamas using tourism to bring increased income Dalai Lama renews peace efforts FOCUS / TIBET Following the recent change of leadership in ...

69. Australia Tibet Council: What Can I Do?: Tibetan Government
The tibetan people, both inside and outside tibet, consider their government in Exilebased in Dharamsala, North India, to be the sole legitimate government of
http://www.atc.org.au/whatcanido/gov.html
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Tibetan Government
Prime Minister of the Tibetan Government in exile
Government
Tibet has two governments, the government in exile, in Dharamsala, India, as well as the Chinese Communist government.
Tibetan Government in Exile
In exile, the Tibetan Government has been reorganised according to modern democratic principles. It administers all matters pertaining to Tibetans in exile, including the re-establishment, preservation and development of Tibetan culture and education, and leads the struggle for the restoration of Tibet's freedom. The Tibetan people, both inside and outside Tibet, consider their Government in Exile based in Dharamsala, North India, to be the sole legitimate government of Tibet.
The Tibetan community in exile functions in accordance with the Charter for Tibetans in Exile and is administered by the Kashag (Council of Ministers), which is accountable to the Assembly of Tibetan People's Deputies (a democratically elected parliament). The Tibetan Supreme Justice Commission is an independent judiciary body.
The Central Tibetan Administration (CTA) is comprised of three autonomous commissions - Election, Public Service and Audit, seven departments - Religion and Culture, Home Affairs, Education, Information and International Relations, Security, Health, and one Council for planning.

70. Australia Tibet Council: Media Releases: Chinese Government Invests $1 Million I
that the survival of tibetan culture was threatened by a deliberate Chinese governmentpolicy of encouraging massive Chinese population transfer into tibet.
http://www.atc.org.au/news/media/20011114_ctculture.html
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Media Releases - 14 November 2001
Chinese Government Invests $1 Million in Tibetan Propaganda Tour
Contact:
Alex Butler 0418 376 331
Paul Bourke 0419 420 526
The Australia Tibet Council said today that the purpose of the tour appeared to be to try to present Tibet as a legitimate part of China, and to give the impression that Tibetan culture was flourishing inside Chinese occupied Tibet. In an internal speech made in June 2000 and leaked to the foreign media, Zhao Qizheng, the Minister in charge of the Information Office said: Ms Butler, President of the Australia Tibet Council, said that the survival of Tibetan culture was threatened by a deliberate Chinese government policy of encouraging massive Chinese population transfer into Tibet. Ms Butler said that Chinese was now the predominant language in government, administration, commerce, education and daily life in Tibet, with nearly all classes in secondary schools and universities taught in Chinese. Tibetan culture was portrayed as backward and not suited to modern life.
For further information Contact : Australia Tibet Council
Phone
Fax
Email
tibetcouncil@atc.org.au

71. UCLA Asia Institute: How Repressive Is The Chinese Government In Tibet?
How Repressive Is the Chinese government in tibet? Scholar tells skepticalaudience that claims by tibetan exiles of Chinese cultural
http://international.ucla.edu/asia/article.asp?parentid=2732

72. Dalai Lama's Exile May End - Theage.com.au
The Dalai Lama wants to go back very much, Thupten Samphel, a spokesmanfor tibet's government, said. It is every tibetan's hope
http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2003/02/08/1044579983876.html
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Dalai Lama's exile may end
February 9 2003 By Luke Harding New Delhi Secret negotiations between China and the Dalai Lama will resume next month amid growing signs that Tibet's spiritual leader is preparing to cut a historic deal allowing him to return to Tibet after almost half-a-century in exile. Several of his senior envoys will travel to Beijing next month, the London-based Guardian newspaper has learned. The delegation from Tibet's India-based government is expected to discuss the circumstances under which the Chinese Government would allow the Dalai Lama to visit Lhasa, Tibet's capital. Since he fled Tibet in 1959, the Dalai Lama has been regularly denounced by Beijing as a "splittist" traitor. But relations have recently thawed. Last September two of the Dalai Lama's envoys went to China for the first direct negotiations with the communist regime in 20 years. Tibet's exiled leadership is now hopeful that China's new President, Hu Jiantao, who takes over in March, will abandon Beijing's hardline position on Tibet, and usher in a period of constructive change.

73. Remarks Of The Honorable Henry J
I note with dismay that freedom of religion remains narrowly circumscribed in tibet.government repression extends to the direct persecution of believers, the
http://www.house.gov/international_relations/107/hyde307.htm
Remarks of the Honorable Henry J. Hyde Hearing on "U.S. Policy Considerations in Tibet" March 7, 2002 Of the many infamous episodes in the century just past, one that still echoes is the statement by British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain in which he publicly washed his hands of involvement in what he termed "a quarrel in a far away country between people of whom we know nothing." With that statement, Chamberlain ensured that he, his country, and the world would pay a price immeasurably greater than any he was capable of imagining. That being said, there are many issues regarding Tibet that evoke great concern on our part. First among these are reports of continuing and widespread human rights abuses, including arbitrary arrest, detention without public trial, and the use of torture. Many of these acts are focused on Tibetans attempting to preserve their religious, cultural, and linguistic heritage. I note with dismay that freedom of religion remains narrowly circumscribed in Tibet. Government repression extends to the direct persecution of believers, the arrest and abuse of monks and nuns, and the outright prohibition of many religious observances. In addition to the limitations imposed on the general population, monasteries and convents have been singled out for even tighter constraints, with comprehensive political controls of their operations and functions made even more onerous by forced political indoctrination. The list I have outlined is not meant to be an exhaustive one, but it does serve as an indication of the range and depth of our concerns. To these, let me add one other subject: the plight of the Tibetan refugees in India, Nepal, and elsewhere. This unfortunate population has been estimated to number 100,000, and it is still growing as others make their way out of Tibet. We should bear in mind that even as we remain rightly concerned about the people within Tibet, we must remember our own responsibilities to those Tibetans who have been forced to flee their homeland.

74. Tibet Justice Center - Tibet Justice Center Reports - The Case Concerning Tibet
Command of the Chinese People's Liberation Army to put down the rebellion thoroughly,the decision is that from this day the tibet Local government is dissolved
http://www.tibetjustice.org/reports/sovereignty/independent/d/

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II
. TIBET IS RIGHTFULLY AN INDEPENDENT STATE
Section D: The Tibetan Government-in-Exile Is The Only Legitimate Government Of Tibet 'Nothing illustrates [the] dynamic aspect of the continuity of the occupied State better than the existence and activity of exiled governments or, as is sometimes more radically said, States in exile.' The first notable examples took place during the First World War, when the governments and armies of occupied States, such as those of Belgium, Serbia, and Montenegro, continued to exist on foreign soil. During the Second World War, an even larger number of governments of States occupied by German and Italian forces, including those of the Netherlands, Norway, Yugoslavia, and Greece, carried on their activities in London. Sir Arnold McNair formulated the accepted view thus: The mere fact that a foreign Government has been deprived of the control of a part or the whole of its territory by an enemy in no way invalidates legislation passed or other acts of sovereignty done by it outside its normal territory.... There is no principle of International law which says that a Government cannot act validly upon foreign territory with the consent of the local sovereign. On 28 March 1959, as soon as the Chinese forces had regained control over Lhasa, Premier Zhou Enlai issued an Order of State Council dissolving the Government of Tibet. The Order stated, in part:

75. Tibet Justice Center - Legal Materials On Tibet - United States - Congressional
Whereas since the invasion of tibet in 1949, the government of the People's Republicof China has taken any expression by the tibetan people of their distinct
http://www.tibetjustice.org/materials/us/us14.html

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Congressional Resolution S. J. Res. 43 (1995) [285]
UNITED STATES CONGRESS 104TH Congress S.J. RES. 43 WASHINGTON, DC. DECEMBER 13, 1995 Helms for himself, Thomas, Mack, Pell, Feingold, Moynihan, and Simon. JOINT RESOLUTION Expressing the sense of Congress regarding Wei Jingsheng; Gedhun Choekyi Nyima, the next Panchen Lama of Tibet; and the human rights practices of the Government of the People's Republic of China. Whereas on November 21, 1995, the Government of the People's Republic of China formally arrested Wei Jingsheng, who is known internationally as the father of the democracy movement in China; Whereas the Government of the People's Republic of China has held Wei Jingsheng incommunicado and without charge since April 1994 and has rebuffed international calls to release him; Whereas Wei Jingsheng has spent all but 6 months of the last 16 years in detention because of his unwavering support for freedom of speech and the development of democracy in China; Whereas at an October 1995 meeting in New York between President Clinton and President Jiang Zemin of China, the Administration urged the Government of the People's Republic of China to release political prisoners and specifically included Wei Jingsheng and others among such prisoners;

76. OneLook® Search Results: Government Of Tibet In Exile
Science, Slang, Sports, Tech, Phrases We found one dictionary with English definitionsthat includes the word government of tibet in exile Tip Click on the
http://www.onelook.com/?w=government of tibet in exile

77. World Tibet Day
and tibet supporters to keep alive the culture and religion of his people, whiletrying to establish a peaceful dialogue with the Chinese government.
http://www.worldtibetday.com/
WORLD TIBET DAY 2003
Message from the
Dalai Lama
WORLD TIBET DAY will be held this year on Sunday July 6th, on the birthday of His Holiness, the Dalai Lama. We created WTD with two main goals: first, as a way to help restore basic freedoms to the Tibetan people. Second as a celebration - for Tibetans and for friends of Tibet - of the unique beauty of Tibetan culture and thought. Last July in its fifth year, we hosted observances in 56 cities in 24 countries; we plan to host WTD events every year until the rights of the Tibetan people are restored, and from then on, as an annual celebration. AS AN OFFSHOOT from WTD, we founded another event, The Interfaith Call for Religious Freedom and Human Rights . In only a few years, the Call has grown phenomenally - with over 300,000 people joining in a worldwide observance last year the final weekend in October. Throughout the year under the aegis of the Call, activists are presenting campaigns at schools and colleges around the world to raise support and awareness about the need for religious freedom and human rights, particularly for the people in occupied Tibet. WITH BOTH WTD AND THE CALL , we're hoping you'll join us with your voices, your participation and your support. His Holiness has given his enthusiastic blessings both to WTD and to the Interfaith Call, saying each is very positive "in creating more awareness and support for the cause of Tibet."

78. TIBETcenter - World Government Resolutions On Tibet
IL 60660 Tel/Fax. (773) 7437772 tibetcenter@aol.com. Historyof tibet - world government resolutions passed concerning tibet.
http://www.buddhapia.com/tibet/resolutions.html
TIBETcenter
6073 N. Paulina, Chicago, IL 60660 tibetcenter@aol.com

History of Tibet - world government resolutions passed concerning Tibet

79. TIBET
Insight into tibet, it's people, religion, struggles, the Chinese occupation, Buddhism, Dalai Lama.Category Regional Europe Society and Culture Ethnicity Asian......tibet, It may happen that here in tibet, religion and government willbe attacked both from without and within. Unless we guard our
http://www.mwebbqs.supanet.com/
TIBET
It may happen that here in Tibet, religion and government will be attacked both from without and within. Unless we guard our own country, it will happen that the Dalai and Panchen Lamas, the Father and the Son, and all the revered holders of the Faith, will disappear and become nameless. Monks and their monasteries will be destroyed. The rule of law will be weakened. The lands and property of government officials will be seized. They themselves will be forced to serve their enemies or wander the country like beggars. All beings will be sunk in great hardship and overwhelming fear; the days and nights will drag on slowly in suffering.
- The Thirteenth Dalai Lama, Thupten Gyatso
TIBET is an ancient country steeped in mystery and wonder. It had been isolated in the Himalayas as a peaceful Buddhist country not open to foreigners until 1949, when the Communist Chinese, under the control of Mao Tse-Tung invaded and killed over 1 million Tibetans and destroyed monasteries, homes and culture. The Tibetans follow five main Buddhist rules or precepts:-
1. I undertake the precept to refrain from destroying living creatures.

80. Education World® - *Social Sciences : Political Science : World Government : As
Greenpeace An Appeal for Peace Read the complete text of Greenpeace'sappeal to the Chinese government to stop nuclear testing in tibet.
http://db.education-world.com/perl/browse?cat_id=4204

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