4/05/2008

SOS TIBET

SOS Tibet...


Tibet's spiritual leader the Dalai Lama talks to a child during his visit in the SOS Children's Village in Hinterbruehl some 25 km south of Vienna, September 17, 2007. SOS Children's Villages are an independent social development organisation, which focuses on neglected and abandoned children and orphans. From Reuters Pictures by REUTERS.
6 months ago: Tibet's spiritual leader the Dalai Lama talks
to a child during his visit in the SOS Children's Village in Hinterbruehl
some 25 km south of Vienna, September 17, 2007. SOS Children's
Villages are an independent social development organisation,
which focuses on neglected and abandoned children and orphans.


This incisive article by Michael Backman outlines the relationship

of the Dalai Lama and his organization to US intelligence.


The Dalai Lama has been on the CIA payroll since the late 1950s.

He is an instrument of US intelligence.


An understanding of this longstanding relationship to the CIA is essential,

particuarly in the light of recent events. In all likelihood US intelligence was

behind the protest movement, organized to occur a few months prior to the

Beijing Olympic games.


M. C. 23 March 2008


The government set up in exile in India and, at least until the 1970s,

received $US1.7 million a year from the CIA.


The money was to pay for guerilla operations against the Chinese,

notwithstanding the Dalai Lama's public stance in support of non-violence,

for which he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1989.


The Dalai Lama himself was on the CIA's payroll from the late 1950s until 1974,

reportedly receiving $US15,000 a month ($US180,000 a year).


The funds were paid to him personally, but he used all or most of them for Tibetan government-in-exile activities, principally to fund offices in New York and Geneva,

and to lobby internationally.


Details of the government-in-exile's funding today are far from clear. Structurally,

it comprises seven departments and several other special offices. There have also

been charitable trusts, a publishing company, hotels in India and Nepal,

and a handicrafts distribution company in the US and in Australia, all grouped under the government-in-exile's Department of Finance.


The government was involved in running 24 businesses in all, but decided

in 2003 that it would withdraw from these because such commercial

involvement was not appropriate.


Several years ago, I asked the Dalai Lama's Department of Finance for

details of its budget. In response, it claimed then to have annual revenue

of about $US22 million, which it spent on various health, education,

religious and cultural programs.


The biggest item was for politically related expenditure, at $US7 million.

The next biggest was administration, which ran to $US4.5 million.

Almost $US2 million was allocated to running the government-in-exile's overseas offices.


For all that the government-in-exile claims to do, these sums seemed remarkably low.


It is not clear how donations enter its budgeting. These are likely to run to

many millions annually, but the Dalai Lama's Department of Finance provided

no explicit acknowledgment of them or of their sources.


Certainly, there are plenty of rumours among expatriate Tibetans of endemic

corruption and misuse of monies collected in the name of the Dalai Lama.


Many donations are channelled through the New York-based Tibet Fund,

set up in 1981 by Tibetan refugees and US citizens. It has grown into

a multimillion-dollar organisation that disburses $US3 million each

year to its various programs.


Part of its funding comes from the US State Department's Bureau for

Refugee Programs.


Like many Asian politicians, the Dalai Lama has been remarkably

nepotistic, appointing members of his family to many positions of

prominence. In recent years, three of the six members of the Kashag,

or cabinet, the highest executive branch of the Tibetan government-

in-exile, have been close relatives of the Dalai Lama.


An older brother served as chairman of the Kashag and as the minister of security. He also headed the CIA-backed Tibetan contra movement in the 1960s.


A sister-in-law served as head of the government-in-exile's planning council

and its Department of Health.


A younger sister served as health and education minister and her husband

served as head of the government-in-exile's Department of Information

and International Relations.


Their daughter was made a member of the Tibetan parliament in exile.

A younger brother has served as a senior member of the private office of

the Dalai Lama and his wife has served as education minister.


The second wife of a brother-in-law serves as the representative of the Tibetan government-in-exile for northern Europe and head of international relations for the government-in-exile. All these positions give the Dalai Lama's family access

to millions of dollars collected on behalf of the government-in-exile.


The Dalai Lama might now be well-known but few really know much about him.

For example, contrary to widespread belief, he is not a vegetarian. He eats meat.

He has done so (he claims) on a doctor's advice following liver complications from

hepatitis. I have checked with several doctors but none agrees that meat consumption is necessary or even desirable for a damaged liver.


What has the Dalai Lama actually achieved for Tibetans inside Tibet?


If his goal has been independence for Tibet or, more recently, greater autonomy,

then he has been a miserable failure.


He has kept Tibet on the front pages around the world, but to what end?

The main achievement seems to have been to become a celebrity.

Possibly, had he stayed quiet, fewer Tibetans might have been tortured,

killed and generally suppressed by China.


In any event, the current Dalai Lama is 72 years old. His successor —
a reincarnation — will be appointed as a child and it will be many years
before he plays a meaningful role. As far as China is concerned, that is one
problem that will take care of itself, irrespective of whether or not
John Howard or Kevin Rudd meet the current Dalai Lama.

Rarely do journalists challenge the Dalai Lama.


Partly it is because he is so charming and engaging. Most published

accounts of him breeze on as airily as the subject, for whom a good giggle

and a quaint parable are substitutes for hard answers. But this is the man

who advocates greater autonomy for millions of people who are currently

Chinese citizens, presumably with him as head of their government. So,

why not hold him accountable as a political figure?


No mere spiritual leader, he was the head of Tibet's government when he went

into exile in 1959. It was a state apparatus run by aristocratic, nepotistic monks

that collected taxes, jailed and tortured dissenters and engaged in all the usual

political intrigues. (The Dalai Lama's own father was almost certainly murdered

in 1946, the consequence of a coup plot.)


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