HomeNewsOpinionXi Jinping in Tibet — Part 1: China’s quest for greater control

Xi Jinping in Tibet — Part 1: China’s quest for greater control

When it comes to development on the Tibetan plateau, Xi Jinping has ambitions to stand out from China’s previous leaders 

July 27, 2021 / 17:06 IST
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Chinese President Xi Jinping
Chinese President Xi Jinping

Communist Party of China (CPC) General Secretary and Chinese President Xi Jinping visited the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) last week. The visit is significant for what it says about how the Chinese Party-State views its control over the Tibetan region.

It is noteworthy that Xi’s last visit to the TAR — one of the provinces carved out of the old Tibet — was in 2011, and so this is the first time he has visited since taking over as China’s top leader. The delay is particularly striking, given that Xi visited China’s other large and troubled ethnic minority province, Xinjiang, in April 2014.

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Much preparation has gone into Xi’s TAR visit. Last year saw visits by top leaders, Wang Yang, number four on the Standing Committee of the CPC Politburo and responsible for Tibet and Xinjiang affairs, Hu Chunhua, State Council Vice Premier and former TAR Party Secretary, and Wang Yi, Chinese State Councillor and Foreign Minister. In August, the CPC conducted the 7th Tibet Work Forum, while in May, the Chinese government issued a white paper to present what it called “a true and panoramic picture of the new socialist Tibet”.

Xi has, in fact, regularly made pronouncements on Tibet-related affairs leaving no one in doubt what the overall approach of the Chinese Party-State is towards the Dalai Lama or the Tibetan exile movement, and the region.