US restores US$6.8mil aid for Tibetans

US restores US$6.8mil aid for Tibetans

The aid had been cut under the Trump administration's 'America First' policy, which hit a number of humanitarian programmes.

Dalai Lama
Tibet first mentioned the funding on the sidelines of the Dalai Lama’s 90th birthday celebration. (EPA Images pic)
NEW DELHI:
The US has restored US$6.8 million in funding for Tibetans in South Asia, the US state department told Reuters today, confirming comments by Tibet’s government-in-exile.

The aid had been cut by president Donald Trump’s administration as part of its “America First” policy that hit a number of programmes, including those aimed at securing food and preventing the spread of HIV in some of the world’s poorest regions.

Last week, the leader of the Tibetan government in-exile in India, Penpa Tsering said Tibetans became “collateral damage” in US foreign aid cuts, and the funding had since been restored. He was speaking on the sidelines of the 90th birthday celebration of Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.

“The (state) department re-instated US$6.8 million in aid for Tibetans in South Asia,” a spokesman said in response to a query from Reuters by e-mail, without saying when the funding was restored.

The US has called on China to cease what it describes as interference in the succession of the 14th Dalai Lama, who fled from Tibet in 1959 in the wake of a failed uprising against Chinese rule and took shelter in India. China has said that the succession will have to be approved by its leaders.

“The US has had a decades-long, bipartisan commitment to support and help advance the dignity and human rights of Tibetans, as well as help Tibetans preserve their distinct religious, cultural, and linguistic identity,” the state department spokesman added.

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