Dalai Lama, "friend" of Japan

2014-07-04 16:10:00 | From:

The Japanese government on Tuesday ratified reinterpretation of the country's pacifist constitution to allow exercise of the collective self-defense right, a move marking a larger military role it will play in Asia, saying it will escalates regional tensions and is a sign of fascism emergence.

Some of the online readers have worried about it will trigger the tension on the dispute of the Diaoyu Islands between China and Japan.

Indisputable historical records showed the Diaoyu Islands had been an inherent part of the Chinese territory. The dispute on it between China and Japan was deliberately provoked by Japanese right-wing forces.

The Japanese government, instead of doing anything to stop the right-wing forces from violating China's sovereignty and sabotaging China-Japan relations, has stepped in and 'purchased' the islands itself.

The Dalai Lama ,who wants to seek support and help from Japan to achieve his goal of splitting Tibet from China ,clearly knows that the right-wing forces in Japan want to split China with the islands dispute, so he takes advantage of their schemes, struggling to secure foreign backing for his own separatist activities.

During a news conference on Nov 5,2012, in Yokohama, the Dalai Lama referred to the Diaoyu Islands as "Senkaku", the Japanese name of the islands that have belonged to China since ancient times.

It is clear that Dalai Lama intends to win the Janpanese right-wings forces' favor by kidnapping the dispute over the Diaoyu Islands.

On the other hand, many political factions in Japan try to establish a hawkish image over the issue to arouse increasing nationalism at home, and Tokyo plans to table its illegal claim over the Diaoyu Islands to the international community,so they need a person like the Dalai Lama to play up the tension and accuse China.

But the collusion of the Dalai Lama and the growing number of Japanese right-wing forces will add tension to already strained Sino-Japan relations.

China has lodged protests against the Japanese government for its tolerance to the Dalai Lama's anti-China separatist activities in Japan.

"We firmly oppose the provision of support by any country or any person for the Dalai Lama's anti-China separatist activities," Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei said at a daily news briefing on Nov.14, 2012.

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