Xi makes second-ever visit to Tibet as China president

Chinese President Xi Jinping came to the Tibetan capital of Lhasa for the second visit to China as the leader of the 60th anniversary of the establishment of Tibet as an autonomous region.
14. Six years after Dalai Lama fled to exile in India after a failed uprising, China’s ruling Communist Party founded the Tibetan Autonomous Region in 1965 after the country’s inner Mongolia, Xinjiang, Guangxi and Ningxia.
Appointment is to provide greater words to local ethnic minority groups, such as the freedom of religious belief.
However, international human rights groups and exiles describe China’s rule in Tibet as routinely “oppressive”, which is a accusation of the authorities in Beijing.
“The first thing is to maintain political stability, social stability, ethnic unity and religious harmony in order to manage, stabilize and develop political stability, social stability, ethnic unity and religious unity.”
The XI last flew to Tibet in July 2021, where the communist party finally called on the party to “follow the party” in a visit to a visit to a large extent perceived by external observers in order to point out that the order of order was established in a long protest against the Chinese administration.
For a short period of time following the 2008 Beijing Olympics, when China opened its doors to the outside world further, protests by Tibetan monks and nuns shook themselves with a series of immolars.
Xi said Tibetan Buddhism should be directed to adapt to China’s socialist system.
The last Chinese leader who visited Tibet before 2021 was Jiang Zemin in 1990.
More generally, Tibetan is an extremely strategic region for China due to its border with India.
The troops on both sides have been clashed within the borders for years.
The Himalayan region has abundant natural resources, including tremendous hydroelectric potential.
Xi’s arrival to Tibeta coincided with China’s best diplomat Wang on a rare journey to India this week, and promised to rebuild the ties of both countries from a deadly 2020 border conflict.
China’s latest Mega Hydroelectric project in Tibet was restless in India.
Xi said that the project should be “strong” as part of China’s carbon dioxide reduction targets while maintaining Asia’s “water tower”.
Xi was accompanied by Wang Hunging and Cai Qi, the fourth and fifth and fifth and fifth and fifth and fifth and fifth party leaders.
In 2015, the party sent the retired Yu Zhengsheng to Tibet for the 50th anniversary of the establishment of the Tibetan Autonomous region.



