Average life expectancy in Tibet rises to 70.6
Before democratic reform in 1959, the average life expectancy in Tibet was just 35.5 years.
Average life expectancy in Tibet rises to 70.6
Before democratic reform in 1959, the average life expectancy in Tibet was just 35.5 years.
US’ Tibet coordinator ‘a vain try’
The appointment of Destro aims to play the Tibet card to save Trump’s presidency. It is useless to change the situation in Tibet, but only exposes the US’ attempt to use Tibet separatists to split China, which will be resented by the Chinese people, Zhu said.
Newest Adrian Zenz article claims 500k Tibetans in forced labor camps
From Wikipedia:
Adrian Zenz … a senior fellow in China studies at the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation.
The Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation is a non-profit anti-communist organization in the United States, authorized by a unanimous Act of Congress in 1993 for the purpose of “educating Americans about the ideology, history and legacy of communism”
Related:
Adrian Zenz, Jamestown Foundation and how to manipulate the ‘free’ press
Tibet: The CIA’s Cancelled War
However there was one dramatic departure from the minimalist approach. For nearly two decades after the 1950 Chinese takeover of Tibet, the CIA ran a covert operation designed to train Tibetan insurgents and gather intelligence about the Chinese, as part of its efforts to contain the spread of communism around the world. Though little known today, the program produced at least one spectacular intelligence coup and provided a source of support for the Dalai Lama. On the eve of Richard Nixon’s historic 1972 meeting with Mao, the program was abruptly cancelled, thus returning the US to its traditional arms-length policy toward Tibet. But this did not end the long legacy of mistrust that continues to color Chinese-American relations. Not only was the Chinese government aware of the CIA program; in 1992 it published a white paper on the subject. The paper included information drawn from reliable Western sources about the agency’s activities, but laid the primary blame for the insurgency on the “Dalai Lama clique,” a phrase Beijing still uses today.