Is India relaxing its policy on avoiding the Dalai Lama’s event? Culture minister Mahesh Sharma and BJP general secretary Ram Madhav will participate in the Dalai Lama’s “Thank you India” programme in Dharamsala this coming weekend.
The article below also mentioned that the Foreign Secretary Vijay Gokhale personally met Dalai Lama and the Sikyong to move the celebration outside New Delhi. Maybe this is a reward for the Dalai Lama and the CTA as they have been cooperative with the Indian directives.
No matter what is the reason for this sudden change in policy, the Tibetans should get the message that they are a thorn in the relationship between India and China. As India and China are preparing for a Modi-Xi summit, in advance of the SCO summit in Qingdao in June, India wants to clear the air for a smooth landing.
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Change in tack? Minister to attend Dalai Lama eventNEW DELHI: After a stunning volte face on its China policy that made it seem like India was suddenly kowtowing to China, India is trying recalibrate its approach by restoring a political level of participation in a programme featuring the Dalai Lama in Dharamshala this weekend.
Culture minister Mahesh Sharma and BJP general secretary Ram Madhav will participate in the Dalai Lama’s “Thank you India” programme in Dharamsala this coming weekend. This comes after a letter by foreign secretary Vijay Gokhale was sent out by the cabinet secretary to all arms of central and state governments asking government functionaries to stay away from these celebrations.
Gokhale personally met Dalai Lama and the Sikyong (chief of the Central Tibetan Administration), Lobsang Sangay, to ask them to move the celebrations outside Delhi. Separately the government cancelled an event on India-China relations at the government-funded think tank, Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA). A global conference on Tibet scheduled for April was also put off.
Government sources reaffirmed there was “no change” in India’s China policy. But India wanted to end the poor optics that marked the last year souring India-China relations, which included Dalai Lama’s visit to Arunachal Pradesh, India’s refusal to attend the OBOR summit, capped by the Doklam crisis.
“None of the core issues have changed,” said sources.
As both sides prepare for a Modi-Xi summit, in advance of the SCO summit in Qingdao in June, India wants to clear the air for a smooth landing.
However, in the process, an over-zealous government succeeded in conveying a very different impression, prompting some criticism.
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/chandigarh/change-in-tack-minister-to-attend-dalai-event/articleshow/63495007.cms