The Dalai Lama will not attend memorial services for fellow Nobel Peace
Prize laureate Nelson Mandela in South Africa, where the Buddhist
spiritual leader has twice been unable to obtain a visa, a spokesman
said Monday.
Tenzin Takhla gave no specific reason for the Dalai Lama missing the
memorial service in Johannesburg and funeral in Mandela's hometown,
saying only that "logistically it's impossible at this time."
The Dalai Lama — based in the Indian hill town of Dharamsala since he
fled China in 1959 — was welcomed to South Africa in 1996 and met with
Mandela when he was South Africa's first black and democratically
elected president.
But in 2009, the South African government blocked the Dalai Lama from
attending a Nobel laureates' peace conference, saying it would detract
attention from the 2010 soccer World Cup.
The Tibetan spiritual leader later made plans to travel to South Africa
in October 2011 for the 80th birthday party of another Nobel laureate,
Archbishop Desmond Tutu. But the South African High Commission office in
New Delhi stalled on processing the visa until the Dalai Lama
eventually withdrew his application.
A South African court acknowledged last year that pressure from China, a
major trading partner with South Africa, played a part in the delays.
The Dalai Lama advocates increased autonomy for his homeland of Tibet, but China accuses him of being a separatist agitator.
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