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Dalai Lama leads prayer for Taiwan typhoon survivors

China scraps plans to highlight its ties with island

By Peter Enav
Associated Press / September 2, 2009

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KAOHSIUNG, Taiwan - The Dalai Lama led thousands of Taiwanese in a colorful prayer service for the survivors of Typhoon Morakot yesterday during a visit that has provoked an irritated but relatively measured response from China.

While Beijing canceled an event meant to highlight improving relations between the sides and scrapped at least two planned exchanges, analysts said the mainland mostly appeared eager to protect the gains made during Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou’s 15-month-old administration.

Since taking office, Ma has jettisoned his predecessor’s anti-China policies, bringing Taiwan’s economy ever closer to the mainland’s, and speaking frequently in favor of a peace treaty with Beijing.

As a result, relations between Taipei and Beijing are at their highest point since the two sides split amid civil war in 1949.

China reviles the Dalai Lama because he has a large international following and has managed to keep its heavy-handed rule over Tibet in the spotlight. It routinely condemns him as a “splittist’’ for his alleged support of Tibetan independence and protested his trip to Taiwan.

His arrival in Taiwan is particularly galling to China, because Beijing regards the island as part of its territory, and resents activity that highlights its lack of control over the island’s politics.

Yesterday, the spry-looking 74-year-old told some 10,000 worshipers at a sports arena in the southern Taiwanese city of Kaohsiung that Morakot’s impact would not be permanent.

Wearing bright red and gold-colored robes and speaking with his characteristic energy, he assured the audience it was possible “to vanquish the atmosphere of the disaster,’’ which killed an estimated 670 when it struck Taiwan early last month.

The Dalai Lama is broadly respected on this mostly Buddhist island of 23 million people, and local media have given considerable attention to his visit.

Some pro-China demonstrators have protested his appearances, but they are in a distinct minority.

China itself has tried to focus its ire on Taiwan’s opposition, which issued the invitation to the Tibetan spiritual leader. Ma signed off on the invitation, but in an apparent gesture of goodwill to China, he said he would not meet the spiritual leader.

A spokeswoman for Ma’s Nationalist Party acknowledged yesterday that the cancellation of two high-level visits by mainland officials to Taiwan and the nixing of ceremonies to celebrate expanded air service across the 100-mile-wide Taiwan Strait appeared to be related to the Dalai Lama’s visit.

“We do not exclude the possibility that [they] could be linked,’’ said Chen Shu-rong.

Still, China specialist Chao Chun-shan of Taipei’s Tamkang University said it was unlikely that Beijing would retaliate further because of the Dalai Lama’s visit - or that Ma would give it cause to do so.

“Both sides have showed restraint,’’ he said. “Both have handled the crisis well so far. I don’t think things will get out of control.’’