Beijing has long accused Tibet's exiled spiritual leader of encouraging separatism and violence, but the Nobel Peace laureate said today he is only seeking "meaningful autonomy" for Tibetans within China and accepts Chinese rule.
"China's hardliner policy completely failed (...)," the 78-year-old said after a lecture in Vilnius, capital of current EU president Lithuania.
"(Chinese) leaders are really now trying to approach (it) more realistically. So that's a hopeful sign."
"I am quite optimistic," he added, saying he saw some signs of change including more and more Chinese intellectuals and Buddhists showing solidarity with Tibet.
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The reports said authorities in some Tibetan areas were allowing locals to worship him as a religious leader. However, in July China denied there had been any change in policy.
The Dalai Lama fled Tibet following a failed uprising against Chinese occupation in 1959 and later founded the Tibetan government-in-exile in India.
He enjoys a good reputation in Lithuania, having been among the first public figures to welcome the Baltic state's independence in 1990 after a half-century of Soviet rule.
He wraps up the four-day visit, during which he also visited parliament, tomorrow.