Dalai Lama: Link brings AIDS, beggars to Tibet

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The Dalai Lama accused Beijing on Wednesday of using a new railway link to flood Tibet with beggars, prostitutes and the unemployed, destroying its culture and traditions.
Tibet's spiritual leader the Lama speaks during a public meeting in Mumbai
Tibet's spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, speaks during a public meeting in Bombay, India, on Wednesday.Adeel Halim / Reuters

The Dalai Lama accused Beijing on Wednesday of using a new railway link to flood Tibet with beggars, prostitutes and the unemployed, destroying its culture and traditions.

“The railway link is a real danger,” said the spiritual leader, who fled to India from Tibet after a failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959.

“Beggars, handicapped people are coming. Their number is huge. Also jobless people facing difficulty in Chinese mainland are coming to Lhasa,” he told a religious gathering in the Indian city of Bombay, which is also known as Mumbai.

The 710-mile rail link opened last July. The world’s highest, it passes through spectacular icy peaks on the Tibetan highlands, touching altitudes of 16,400 feet.

Beijing says the 13-hour connection from China’s far-western province of Qinghai to Tibet’s capital, Lhasa, will bring economic and social development to the long-isolated region.

‘Second invasion of Tibet’
But Tibetan exiles — about 80,000 of them live in India — have dubbed the rail link to the “second invasion of Tibet.” They say it will only increase Chinese migration, dilute Tibetan culture and militarize the region.

Critics Fear Railway May Impact Traditional Lifestyles In Tibet
DANGXIONG COUNTY, CHINA - AUGUST 27: (CHINA OUT) A Tibetan woman walks in a pasture with yaks near the Qinghai-Tibet Railway on August 27, 2006 in Dangxiong County of Tibet Autonomous Region, China. The 1,956-kilometer-long (1,215 miles) Qinghai-Tibet railway, linking Xining, capital of Qinghai Province, with Lhasa, capital of Tibet Autonomous Region, is the world's highest and longest plateau railroad. This is the first railway connecting Tibet with other parts of China. Chinese tourists are flooding into Lhasa this summer with the recently completed railway bringing an extra 3,000 people a day into Tibet. Critics say that it could threaten the cultural and even the physical landscape of the fragile Tibetan plateau, according to reports. (Photo by China Photos/Getty Images)Getty Images AsiaPac

The Dalai Lama said Beijing was forcing poor villagers to relocate to Tibet and was also sending uneducated young girls from the countryside to be “inducted as prostitutes” in Lhasa.

“Therefore, that is increasing the danger of AIDS,” he said.

The Dalai Lama said that besides destroying the cultural identity of Tibet, the railway was an “environmental menace” because it was helping China mine at very high altitudes.

“We are very concerned about the environmental impact of the railway link,” he said.

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