"I'm proud to have offered this resolution that calls for the Chinese government to sit down with Tibet's leaders without preconditions, listen to their grievances, and work toward an agreement that guarantees the rights and security of the Tibetan people," Congressman Eliot Engel, Ranking Member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said.
The resolution introduced by Engel and supported by several other lawmakers was passed unanimously by the House of Representatives yesterday.
In his speech on the House floor, Engel said human rights conditions for the Tibetan people continue to deteriorate in Tibet as more monasteries come under government control, and as more people are arrested, the desperation of the Tibetan people grows.
"Tragically, more than 140 Tibetans have burned themselves alive in protest of growing oppression. Yet the Chinese authorities have not changed course. Despite talk of mutual respect and social harmony, the reality in Tibet tells a very, very different story," he said.
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The Congressman said the Dalai Lama has shown that democratic institutions can thrive alongside spiritual leadership.
"It's in that spirit that we urge the Chinese government not to involve itself in the spiritual succession process for the next Dalai Lama, should there be one," he said.
"That's why this measure also calls on our own government to press the issues of human rights, political rights, and religious rights at the highest levels of the Chinese government, and to call for the immediate release of Tibetan political prisoners," he said.