It is interesting.
In early constitutional documents, though the Republic of China claimed Tibet as part of China, many Chinese political leaders acknowledged the principle of self-determination.
At a party conference in 1924, Sun Yat-sen issued a statement calling for the right of self-determination of all Chinese ethnic groups: "The Kuomintang can state with solemnity that it recognizes the right of self-determination of all national minorities in China and it will organize a free and united Chinese republic."
Of course, this was latter forgotten.
TibetanReview.net
May03, 2010
Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jou said Apr 30 in an interview with the CNN that he supports autonomy for Tibet and the Dalai Lama’s efforts to talk to China. “This is the only way to solve the Tibet issue,” DPA Apr 30 quoted Ma as telling CNN.
Ma had also said Taiwan wants peace with China, but needs to buy modern weapons from the United States for self-defence. He had reiterated that Taiwan must maintain independence and does not consider a "one country, two models" system like Hong Kong's workable.
Although Taipei-Beijing relations have greatly eased since Ma took office in 2008, China accused the US of trampling on what it claimed were its core interests when President Barack Obama decided to sell defensive arms worth $ 6.8 billion to Taiwan and welcomed the Dalai Lama to the White House.
China considers Taiwan a renegade province of the PRC although the communists who took power in Beijing in 1949 and went on to annex East Turkestan, Inner Mongolia and Tibet have never ruled the de facto sovereign island.
The Han Chinese have a long history of viewing the world through their own prism of imperialistic attitude.
ReplyDeleteThis article gives a great perspective of the true nature of the historical implications of China’s claim to Tibet.
http://one-just-world.blogspot.com/2010/04/tibetan-serfs-emancipation-day-28th_3323.html