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India and China have to live together as neighbours : Dalai Lama

Picture Courtesy: dalailama.com

Picture Courtesy: dalailama.com

As India and China are engaged war of words over the Doklam issue, the Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama today said India and China cannot defeat each other and both the countries will have to live together as neighbours.

According to a PTI news report, The spirit of “Hindi-Chini Bhai Bhai” is the only way forward, he stressed. “In the current border situation, neither India nor China can defeat the other. Both countries are militarily powerful,” the Dalai Lama said.

Both the countries will have to live together as neighbours, he said. “There may be some incidents of cross-border firing. It does not matter,” he said.

The Dalai Lama was responding to questions by reporters at an event .

He said, “In 1951, a 17-point agreement was signed between the Local Government of Tibet and Peoples Republic of China for peaceful liberation of Tibet. Today China is changing and has become a country with the highest Buddhist population. They (India and China) should go back to Hindi Chini Bhai Bhai again.”

It is a Communist government but Buddhism is widely accepted, he said.

“Earlier, the Dalai Lama used to be the head of spiritual and political movements in Tibet, but in 2011, I totally retired from politics. It was a way of democratising the institutions, because it had some feudal elements in it,” said the 14th Dalai Lama.

He suggested that India should “develop pilgrimage for Chinese” people who are followers of Buddhism.

“We must understand that the followers of Buddhism in China are actually following the line of Indian Buddhism that came from Nalanda (Indian seat of learning) and Sanskrit,” said the spiritual leader.

“India should develop a pilgrimage for Chinese people who follow Buddhism. These people can come to places like Bodh Gaya and can come closer to India emotionally as well,” he said.

India and China have been locked in a standoff in the Dokalam area since June 16 after Chinese troops began constructing a road near the Bhutan trijunction.

Commenting on the definition of secularism in he Indian context, the Dalai Lama said, “Respect for all religions and even the non-believers too. This is the definition of secularism in Indian context.”

“During the French Revolution and the Bolshevik movement, people opposed the exploitation by their kings and queens. Then religious institutions were supporting the feudal lords; hence the revolution also went against them. Thats why in the western context, secularism has become a word expressing disrespect to religion,” he said.

“Even an Indian communist leader had once told me that as a communist party worker, he does not believe in God. But for the people who he works for, they do believe in God and it is his duty to respect their feelings. I welcome such a mature approach,” the Dalai Lama said.

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