China condemns Dalai Lama of abusing child rights
Updated: 2013-10-15 18:29
(Xinhua)
|
||||||||
BEIJING - China accused the 14th Dalai Lama on Tuesday of tearing hundreds of Tibetan families apart and causing serious abuses of children's rights by orchestrating a Swiss campaign in the 1960s to adopt Tibetan orphans.
The condemnation came after a Swiss newspaper Neue Zuercher Zeitung published a series of stories in September questioning the privately run campaign, masterminded by a Swiss entrepreneur and the Dalai Lama.
The Dalai Lama had expressed a wish to turn the children into an elite for the "Tibetan government-in-exile".
"The stories in the Swiss media have highlighted how the Dalai Lama and his clique fabricated so-called orphans and sent them to Switzerland," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said at a regular news briefing.
Charles Aeschimann, director of an energy company, adopted Tibetan children after reading about the Tibetan refugees and the Dalai Lama's call to American and European families to take Tibetan child refugees into care and give them a Western education.
"The Dalai Lama manufactured the orphan incident out of his Tibetan independence initiative, which caused hundreds of families to be torn apart, " Hua said.
Of the some 200 children placed in Swiss families and the Pestalozzi children's village in Trogen, only 19 of them are true orphans. The others either have both father and mother or at least have one living parent, according to the Swiss reports.
"The Dalai Lama's deeds have trampled on the children's individual rights and publicly violated common ethics and morality. All humane, justice-loving people should condemn such acts," Hua said.
- New Yorkers celebrates Columbus Day
- Smartphone firm rockets into the US
- Storm swamps car insurance firms
- 3 US economists share 2013 Nobel Prize in Economics
- Canton Fair to promote yuan use
- Vintage cars gather in downtown Beijing
- Senate leads hunt for shutdown and debt deal
- Chinese education for Thai students
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Riding the wave of big bargain buy-ups |
Last of the reindeer hunters |
Time to reduce dollar's hold |
Facial Expressions |
Rallying to the rescue of fishermen |
Writers chase dreams online |
Today's Top News
At least 20 killed in strong Philippine quake
Airport bomber sentenced to 6 years in jail
Conference salutes China-US ties progress
NSA collects millions of email address lists
The itch that Kobe just can't scratch
Cosmetics is a mirror to China's economy
Chinese may have discovered the future of batteries
Row over NASA's ban should be wake-up call
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |