
Xi Jinping makes rare visit to Tibet, marking 60 years of contested Chinese rule
Xi arrived in Tibet's regional capital of Lhasa, where he 'received a warm welcome from people of various ethnic groups' who waved bouquets of flowers and danced 'to joyful rhythms,' the Xinhua News Agency said.
The agency said Xi urged the building of a 'modern socialist' Tibet 'that is united, prosperous, civilized, harmonious and beautiful.'
Communist forces occupied Tibet in 1951. In 1965, Mao Zedong's single-party dictatorship established the Tibet autonomous region. Decades of political repression followed, including the demolition of some Buddhist monasteries and the imprisonment of monks.
Get daily National news
Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up
By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy
Recent years have seen the large-scale migration of majority Han Chinese to the high-altitude region, the virtual closure of Tibet to journalists and foreigners, the removal of Tibetan children from their families to boarding schools where they are taught in Mandarin, and the repression of all forms of political or cultural expression outside Communist Party control.
Story continues below advertisement
1:16
Trump says China won't attack Taiwan on his watch, island maintains it must rely on its own security
China also insists on the right to appoint a reincarnation of the Dalai Lama, Tibetan Buddhism's highest-ranking leader, who recently turned 90 and lives in self-imposed exile in neighboring India after fleeing Chinese rule in 1959.
On Tuesday, exiled Tibetans protested in India against the Chinese foreign minister's visit there.
Critics say repression in Tibet has become more systematic and wide-reaching since the crushing of anti-government protests in 2008, while China claims to have reduced poverty and built up the region's infrastructure.
China claims Tibet has been part of its territory for centuries, but many Tibetans say they were essentially independent for most of that time under their Buddhist theocracy.
China's contested border with India runs along Tibet's southern edge, where China has been building roads and other infrastructure for possible military use.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Global News
37 minutes ago
- Global News
Lake Okanagan Resort residents push for new water treatment plant, following McDougall Fire
Two years after the McDougall Creek wildfire destroyed 90 percent of Lake Okanagan Resort — including its privately owned water system — nearly 200 residents are still waiting for answers. With no clear path forward, frustration is mounting. 'Step up and show some real action toward resolving this so we can start building our building and get people home,' said Lake Okanagan community member Heather Ormiston. Residents can't begin rebuilding until basic services — power, sewer, and water — are restored. In a statement, the BC Utilities Commission said, 'Lake Okanagan Resort is responsible for requesting re-connection to the BC Hydro system to power its own facilities, such as its water treatment plant.' Both the BCUC and Interior Health confirm they have no authority to compel the resort's owners to repair or operate the system. Get daily National news Get the day's top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day. Sign up for daily National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy 'Interior Health regulates community water systems under the Drinking Water Protection Act, with responsibility for overseeing water quality, testing, and treatment safety standards,' said Interior Health. Story continues below advertisement 'The Lake Okanagan Resort is a privately owned water system that was significantly damaged during the McDougall Creek fire.' With no clear movement from the resort's owners, residents have taken matters into their own hands — proposing a new water treatment facility that would be built and operated by the Regional District of Central Okanagan (RDCO). Ormiston pointed to a nearby site she says could work. 'We have all this land — this would be a great spot for our new water treatment plant.' However, the district says it does not have the legal authority to create or manage water infrastructure on private property. Despite this, residents remain hopeful. 'We've engaged with professionals,' Ormiston said. 'And we feel that this could be happening by this spring if we get all levels of government to the table.' Now, West Kelowna–Peachland MLA Macklin McCall is calling on the Premier to intervene. In a letter sent to David Eby, the BC Conservative MLA urged ministry-level action, the potential expropriation of the resort's water system, and emergency funding to build a new, reliable water solution for the displaced community. 'This overrules,' McCall said. 'It has the province potentially come in and say, 'Okay, here's the issue, here's what our authorities are — we're going to take possession of it.'' He stressed this should be treated as an emergency, not a political issue. 'I am absolutely on board to sit down with the ministers, with the Premier,' McCall said. 'A fire came through. These people — they need water. These are their homes.'


Toronto Star
an hour ago
- Toronto Star
Mark Carney and Donald Trump hold first official call in two months
Prime Minister Mark Carney, listens as President Donald Trump speaks during a group photo at the G7 Summit on June 16, 2025, in Kananaskis, Alta. Mark Schiefelbein AP Carney has been peppered with attacks from Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre about his handling of the trade crisis, with Poilievre, fresh off a Monday byelection win, slamming the prime minister on Wednesday for his campaign assurances that he was the leader best positioned to wrangle a win out of Trump. 'Mr. Carney, in spite of his great promises of being able to manage Trump, is losing tariff wars with China, with the U.S. and has made no progress in opening other markets abroad,' Poilievre said at a news conference in Surrey, B.C. Yet Carney received support from another staunch conservative on Thursday, with Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe urging a collaborative approach as Canada fends off trade pressures from not only the U.S., but also China's latest targeting of Canadian canola. 'We do need to work together. And this would be new, for this media gallery to have me standing in front of them saying that I am hoping for every success for a Liberal prime minister in this conversation,' Moe told reporters in Saskatoon. The Saskatchewan premier had just convened a meeting with his own front bench, federal Agriculture Minister Heath MacDonald and his parliamentary secretary Kody Blois, and a range of industry groups and exporters. Last week, China slapped a preliminary duty of 75.8 per cent on Canadian canola seed, after Beijing initiated an anti-dumping investigation into Canadian canola last year following the federal government's decision to impose 100 per cent tariffs on imports of Chinese electric vehicles. Earlier this year, China imposed a 100-per-cent tariff on Canadian canola oil and canola meal. The Canola Council of Canada, which attended Thursday's meeting, says the combination of those actions means the Chinese market is now 'effectively closed' to the Canadian canola industry. Moe said Canada's primary goal is to 'protect the market share and the market access that we have into those significant markets, namely the United States of America, of which we are experiencing much uncertainty on a number of fronts, including agriculture products, as well as China, where we have seen first retaliatory tariffs on oil and meal … and more recently, the allegations of anti-dumping.' Moe, who is preparing to visit China in the coming weeks, said it is up to Carney and Chinese President Xi Jinping to resolve the dispute. Blois, speaking alongside the Saskatchewan premier, said Canada's Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is also focusing on identifying other markets for Canadian canola. 'We're cognizant of the importance of the market, and at the same time, I think recognizing that we are in a different world,' Blois said. Anand spent Thursday in Washington with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, though the minister's office said the duo did not discuss Canada-U.S. trade because those matters fall under the purview of her cabinet colleague Dominic LeBlanc. A readout from Rubio's office said he and his Canadian counterpart discussed Haiti's security, the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, the Russia-Ukraine war, and 'mechanisms to strengthen our hemisphere's response to China's coercive activity.'


Global News
2 hours ago
- Global News
Ontario college support staff take step toward strike with ‘no board' request
The union that represents thousands of full-time support staff at Ontario's colleges has taken a step toward a possible strike. The Ontario Public Service Employees Union says it has requested a 'no board' report, and once issued by the province's labour ministry it would set a 16-day countdown to a legal strike position. Get breaking National news For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen. Sign up for breaking National newsletter Sign Up By providing your email address, you have read and agree to Global News' Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy The union says there is no strike date at this time, but it would put them in a position to withdraw services for the fall semester. Members voted earlier this month 77.3 per cent in favour of authorizing a strike, if necessary. The College Employer Council, the bargaining agent for the province's publicly funded colleges, has said the union's demands would expose colleges to more than $900 million in additional costs. OPSEU has proposed a moratorium on campus closures and preventing further layoffs, as the sector has seen closures and what the union describes as thousands of job losses due to a funding crisis.