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China denies changing policy on Dalai Lama: official
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) June 29, 2013


Philippine VP calls off China appeal trip for drug mule
Manila (AFP) June 30, 2013 - Philippine Vice President Jejomar Binay called off a proposed visit to China Sunday to save a Filipina from being executed there for drug trafficking, saying Beijing had declined to receive him.

Binay said he was to have left during the day, carrying a letter from President Benigno Aquino to Chinese President Xi Jinping asking him to spare the woman.

"This Saturday, I was informed that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China has sent word that now would not be a convenient time for me to visit China," Binay said in a statement.

"I wanted to go to China to personally appeal for compassion. I am sad however that China has chosen to take this position regarding my visit," he added.

"Given this development, I am left with no option but to cancel my trip to China. I ask for prayers for our compatriot and her family."

The woman was one of two Filipinos arrested for smuggling more than 12 kilograms (26 pounds) of high-grade heroin into China in 2011.

The execution is due to take place Tuesday, Binay's office has said, while the man had his execution set back by two years.

Chinese embassy spokesmen in Manila could not be reached for comment Sunday.

Aquino had previously sent Binay to China in February 2011 to seek a reprieve for three Filipinos also convicted of drug trafficking, but the three were executed the following month.

The executions triggered widespread condemnation in the Philippines, which abolished the death penalty in 2006.

The latest case comes amid already rocky bilateral relations between the two countries soured by overlapping territorial claims in the South China Sea.

About a tenth of the Philippines' 100 million population work abroad, many of them under harsh conditions where drug traffickers sometimes exploit them into becoming drug mules.

The Philippine foreign department says 213 Filipinos have been jailed in drug-related cases in China.

China denied changing its stance on exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama on Saturday, after reports said Beijing had relaxed its policies of publicly denouncing him and banning worship of his image.

"Our policy towards the Dalai Lama is clear and consistent, and has not changed," China's state bureau of religious affairs said in a fax sent to AFP.

Reports by a Tibet-focused rights group and US-based Radio Free Asia said China was showing signs of rethinking some aspects of its Tibet policy, which has been blamed for sparking a wave of more than 110 self-immolations by Tibetans since 2009.

Authorities in some Tibetan areas were allowing locals to "openly venerate the Dalai Lama as a religious leader but not as a 'political' figure," Radio Free Asia reported.

Local authorities had dropped policies requiring monks to denounce the Dalai Lama, according to London-based rights group Free Tibet. The issue has been seen as a key source of tension between monks and government officials.

China regularly condemns the global spiritual figure, and has branded him an anti-China "separatist".

China's top religious authority repeated that position on Saturday, saying: "If the Dalai Lama is to improve his relations with China's government, he must drop his separatist position...and stop making statements which damage the peaceful development of Tibet."

Free Tibet said Thursday that monks at a monastery in Lhasa, the capital of the Tibetan Autonomous Region, were told they could show pictures of the Dalai Lama, reversing a 17-year ban on displaying his image.

The Dalai Lama fled Tibet following a failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959 and later founded the Tibetan government-in-exile in India.

The Chinese government has strongly denounced foreign leaders for meeting with the Dalai Lama, reportedly denying foreign leaders access to its top officials if they do so.

It is hard to verify information about China's policies in Tibet, as few journalists have been able to enter the region without government-appointed guides, while reports from other Tibetan areas are regularly obstructed by local police.

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