Talk:Tibetan resistance movement

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The views mentioned in this note tend be one sided and do not in a unbiased way represent the plight and wishes of the tibetan populace in general. It is a matter of shame that factuality has been spurned in order to represent the view of one interested party. This is one thing that may one day lead to this website earning disrepute. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.156.6.54 (talkcontribs)

[edit] "Disrepute" undue

Nothing in this article seems unfounded or politicized, other than the objection above. There certainly exists an outside and inside resistence to the Chinese occupation. Whether or not the resistence represents popular opinion of Tibet's native population isn't the point here. Nor are the supposed benefits to the invasion and occupation claimed by China's Communist Party.

[edit] "in the heart of"

"The initial People's Liberation Army invasion of Tibet in 1950 met little resistance in the heart of the country."

In Tenzin Gyatso, 14th Dalai Lama it is said that The People's Liberation Army stopped short of the old border between Tibet and Xikang and demanded negotiations. So which is right?

Both. Xikang is nowaday's east TAR + north Yunnan. -- Миборовский 01:37, 26 September 2006 (UTC)