Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
02KATHMANDU1332
2002-07-09 11:22:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Kathmandu
Cable title:  

POLICE CANCEL DALAI LAMA BIRTHDAY EVENTS IN

Tags:  PREF PHUM PREL NP 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KATHMANDU 001332 

SIPDIS

GENEVA FOR RMA
LONDON FOR POL/RIEDEL
BEIJING PASS CHENGDU

E.O. 12958: DECL: 07/08/2012
TAGS: PREF PHUM PREL NP
SUBJECT: POLICE CANCEL DALAI LAMA BIRTHDAY EVENTS IN
KATHMANDU

REF: A. KATHMANDU 1326

B. KATHMANDU 1315

C. KATHMANDU 1245

Classified By: DCM Robert K. Boggs, Reasons 1.5, (b),(d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 KATHMANDU 001332

SIPDIS

GENEVA FOR RMA
LONDON FOR POL/RIEDEL
BEIJING PASS CHENGDU

E.O. 12958: DECL: 07/08/2012
TAGS: PREF PHUM PREL NP
SUBJECT: POLICE CANCEL DALAI LAMA BIRTHDAY EVENTS IN
KATHMANDU

REF: A. KATHMANDU 1326

B. KATHMANDU 1315

C. KATHMANDU 1245

Classified By: DCM Robert K. Boggs, Reasons 1.5, (b),(d).


1. (C) Summary. Three Tibetan community events planned at a
major hotel in Kathmandu July 6-7 to mark the Dalai Lama's
birthday were cancelled by Nepali police. The police
reportedly acted out of concern for heightened sensitivities
in the run-up to the first official visit to China by Nepal's
new monarch. Events in honor of the Dalai Lama had been held
at the Radisson in previous years, and management said it
believed that such events would be allowed to occur again
after the King's visit. The Office of Tibet took out a
front-page ad in Nepal's premier English-language daily to
announce the last-minute cancellation. End Summary.


2. (C) Three Tibetan community events scheduled in Kathmandu
July 6 and 7 to mark the Dalai Lama's birthday were cancelled
at the urging of Nepal's police. Nonetheless, a July 6
program in the Dalai Lama's honor held on the privately owned
grounds of the Tibetan Reception Center, located on the
outskirts of the capital, was allowed to go forward. The
festivities, which lasted all day, included speeches,
prayers, dancing and music. (Comment: This continues the
recent pattern whereby Tibetans can hold community events on
their own property--monasteries, refugee camps--but not at
public venues (Ref C). End Comment.)


3. (C) On July 5, the Superintendent of Police (SP) for the
Kathmandu Valley contacted the management of the U.S.-owned
Radisson hotel, where all three receptions were to be held,
the hotel's Acting General Manager (AGM) told Poloff. The SP
warned that "Tibetan-related events" would not be permitted
"during these days," and threatened to close them down if
they attempted to go forward. If small groups of Tibetans
held private, family gatherings in the Radisson's
restaurants, these would not be considered "Tibetan-related
events," the SP added.


4. (C) The SP declined to elaborate when pressed to explain
the reason for the prohibition. However, the AGM heard from
another government official that the gatherings were banned
due to heightened sensitivities related to the upcoming visit
of Nepal's King to China. King Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah
left July 9 on his first official visit to China since
becoming monarch thirteen months ago (Ref A).


5. (C) In previous years, the sponsors of the three cancelled
events--the Office of Tibet (the Dalai Lama's
Representative),the Mussoorie Alumni Association and the
Tibetan Women's Association--have all held events at the
Radisson to mark the Dalai Lama's birthday as well as other
social occasions such as Tibetan New Year. Radisson
management believes these gatherings will be allowed once
again after the King's China visit is completed. If they are
not permitted, the AGM lamented, the Radisson stands to lose
an estimated Nepali Rupees 700,00 (USD 9000) in revenue this
year, a considerable sum in Nepal's current depressed
economic environment.


6. (C) The Dalai Lama's Representative in Nepal, Wangchuk
Tsering, was informed only late on July 5 that his July 6

SIPDIS
evening reception had been prohibited. Faced with having to
notify several hundred invited guests of the cancellation, he
scrambled to take out a front-page ad in Nepal's
largest-circulation English-language daily, the Kathmandu
Post. The ad, which cost N.Rs. 23,000 (USD 300),appeared on
the lower right-hand corner of page one. Reaction was
uniformly supportive of the Tibetans, Tsering said. Human
rights groups contacted him to say that they would take up
the issue with Nepali authorities.


7. (C) One local ethnic-Tibetan contact called Poloff to
comment on the front-page juxtaposition of Tsering's
announcement with the text of a U.S. Embassy News Release on
the July 5 bombing at the headquarters of the Prime
Minister's political party (Ref B). The contact expressed
his appreciation that the Embassy's statement read in part,
"democracy can flourish only when citizens can meet openly
and assemble without the threat of terrorist violence."

MALINOWSKI