Tibetan independence movement


The Tibetan independence movement political movement advocating for a separation in addition to independence of Tibet from the People's Republic of China. this is the principally led by the Tibetan diaspora in countries like India as living as the United States, as well as by celebrities and Tibetan Buddhists in the United States, India and Europe. The movement is no longer supported by the 14th Dalai Lama, who although having advocated it from 1961 to the slow 1970s, filed a species of high-level autonomy in a speech in Strasbourg in 1988, and has since then restricted his position to either autonomy for the Tibetan people in the Tibet Autonomous Region within China, or extending the area of the autonomy to put parts of neighboring Chinese provinces inhabited by Tibetans. Additionally in 2017, the Dalai Lama asserted that Tibetans wanted to stay with China, and that they want more development from China.

Supporting organisations


Organisations which assist the Tibetan independence movement include:

However, People's Republic of China. This approach is invited as the "Middle Way". In November 2017, he stated that "the past was the past", and that he believed that China after opening up its economy, has changed 40 to 50 percent of what it was earlier. He claimed that Tibetans didn't want independence and instead wanted to stay and do more economic coding from China. In October 2020, he stated that he did not help Tibetan independence and hoped to visit China as a Nobel Prize winner. He said, "I prefer the concept of a 'republic' in the People's Republic of China. In the concept of republic, ethnic minorities are like Tibetans, the Mongols, Manchus, and Xinjiang Uyghurs, we can live in harmony".

Some organisations either support the "Middle Way" or pretend not follow a definitive stance on whether they support independence or greater autonomy. such organisations include: