Han Chinese migrants causing unrest in Tibet
July 25th, 2010 - 7:22 pm ICT by ANINew York, July 25 (ANI): Tibet is in a state of unrest after Han Chinese migrants including workers, investors, merchants, teachers and soldiers poured into a remote part of the country.
According to The New York Post, Chinese leaders see development, along with an enhanced security presence, as the key to pacifying the Buddhist dominant region.
Beijing invested three billion dollars in the Tibet Autonomous Region in 2009, a 31 percent increase over 2008. Tibet’s gross domestic product is growing at a 12 percent annual rate, faster than China’s average.
Although the influx of money and people has ushered new prosperity, it has also deepened resentment among many Tibetans.
Migrant Han entrepreneurs elbow out Tibetan rivals, then return home for the winter after reaping profits. Large Han-owned companies dominate main industries, from mining to construction to tourism.
“Why did I come here? To make money, of course!” the paper quoted Xiong Zhahua, a migrant from Sichuan Province who spends five months the year running a restaurant on the shores of chilly Nam Tso, a lake north of Lhasa, as saying.
Some Chinese officials acknowledge the disenfranchisement of Tibetans, though they defend the right of the Han to migrate to the region.
“The flow of human resources follows the rule of market economics and is also indispensable for the development of Tibet but the current system may have caused an imbalanced distribution. We are taking measures to solve this problem,” Hao Peng, vice chairman and deputy party secretary of the region, said.
“Tibetans just get low-end jobs,” he added.
Chinese officials have said Tibetans make up more than 95 percent of the region’s 2.9 million people, but refuse to give estimates on Han migrants, who are not registered residents. (ANI)
- Chinese influx eroding Tibetan culture: US report - Apr 01, 2011
- Tibetans in Western China protest against proposed language curbs - Oct 23, 2010
- 'China should address Tibet issue' - Oct 25, 2011
- All Tibet news media to be bilingual in five years: Officials - Nov 13, 2011
- 'Dalai Lama not inciting self-immolations' - Mar 26, 2012
- Tibetan struggle a movement for true democracy: Gere - Jan 11, 2012
- 'Tom and Jerry' now in Tibetan language - Jan 14, 2012
- Tibetan self immolations: Why isn't the world listening? (Comment) - Mar 29, 2012
- Tibet situation grim, needs global intervention, say exiles - Feb 24, 2012
- Self-immolations in Tibet politically motivated: Lawmaker - May 16, 2012
- China plans to protect Tibetan cultural relics - Mar 02, 2012
- Tibetan protest in 2008, the result of genuine grievances against China: Report - Jun 06, 2009
- Two self-immolations in Tibet - Mar 05, 2012
- Economic restructuring most pressing task: Wen (Lead) - Mar 05, 2012
- Czech deputy PM concerned over Tibet situation - Mar 02, 2012
Tags: billion dollars, chinese leaders, chinese migrants, chinese officials, current system, disenfranchisement, dominant region, enhanced security, five months, gross domestic product, influx, lhasa, market economics, nam tso, new york post, party secretary, resentment, security presence, sichuan province, tibet autonomous region