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Some party officials have neglected important political issues and the country’s anti-separatist struggle, Wang Yongjun, head of the discipline watchdog in Tibet, which is officially called the Tibet Autonomous Region, was quoted as saying. The Global Times, a tabloid publication attached the ruling Communist Party of China (CPC), also quoted a 2016 report issued by Tibet’s discipline watchdog linking “15 party officials to alleged illegal overseas separatist organisations in 2014 who provided intelligence to the Dalai Lama clique and funded secessionist activities.”
It, however, did not reveal the names or the designations of the officials. This is the first time official media here has come out with a disclosure of Chinese officials’ links with the Dalai Lama after he fled from China to India in 1959. Wang, in an article published yesterday in a magazine run by the CPC, the Central Commission of Discipline Inspection and the Ministry of Supervision, wrote that “some have even donated to the 14th Dalai Lama clique, joined illegal underground organisations and provided intelligence to overseas organisations.”
A few party officials are failing to “uphold their political integrity” and are “completely ignoring political discipline,” Wang said, adding that such behaviour has affected the CPC coherence and its ability to fight separatism. China considers the 14th Dalai Lama as a political exile who has attempted to split Tibet from China under the guise of religion.
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