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A:
"Tibet" refers to Tibet Autonomous Region of the People's
republic of China. Under its jurisdiction are Lhasa City, six prefectures
(Xigaze, Shannan, Nyingchi, Qamdo, Nagqu and Ngari) and 76 counties,
spread over an area of 1.2 million square kilometers. Its borders
are; the Jinsha River in the east, the Outer Himalaya Mountains
in the south, the Karakorum Mountains and the Himalaya Mountains
in the west, and the Kunlun Mountains, and the Tanggula Mountains
in the north. In Tibet's early history this region was divided into
four parts, namely, Wei, Zang, Ngari and Duomai (present-day Qamdo
Prefectue). During the Tang Dynasty (618-907) Songtsan Gambo (?-650)
established the Tubo Kingdom here. During the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368),
this region was called Tubot or Dbus-gTsang. In an imperial decree
issued in 1663 by Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911)
the "Panchen Hutuktu of Tibet" was mentioned. Snce then,
the region has been called Tibet.
"Tibetan areas"
refer to Tibetan autonomous areas established in accordance with
the Constitution of the People's Republic of China and the Law of
Regional Ethnic Autonomy. They include Tibet Autonomous Region,
six Tibetan autonomous prefectures in Qinghai Province (one of them
is Haixi Mongol-Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture0, one Tibetan autonomous
prefecture in Sichuan Province, one Tibetan prefecture in Yunnan
Province and one Tibetan prefecture in Gansu Province.
The term "Tibet and other Tibetan areas" refers to Tibet
and Tibetan areas outside Tibet.
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The
photo taken on Jan. 20, 2003 shows the beautiful scenery of
the Lalu Everglades in Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet
Autonomous Region. The Lalu Ever glades, covering an area of
6.2 square kilometers, is a regulator of weather in Lhasa. |
These Tibetan areas
have neither constituted a unified administrative region, nor have
they formed a unified economic region. Many Tibetan areas outside
of Tibet, located at the edge of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau or on
vital communication lines, have been the venues where various ethnic
groups intercourse, clash and blend. In addition to the Tibetans,
there are other ethnic groups living there from generation to generation,
including ancient ethnic minorities such as Xianbei, Huihu and Dangxiang,
and the Mongols, Han, Hui, Salar, Qiang, and Naxi. They have worked
hard to develop these areas. After the collapse of the Tubo Kingdom
in the ninth century, these belonged to different local regimes,
or were unified by the central government. After the founding of
the Qing Dynasty in the 17th century, with support of the central
government, the Gelupa Sect of Tibetan Buddhism ruled Tibet, but
the former local government of Tibet headed by the Dalai Lama never
had jurisdiction over the Tibetan areas outside of Tibet. It was
after the founding of the People's Republic of China that the state
instituted the system of regional ethnic autonomy, which gave rise
to the establishment of autonomous regions, prefectures and counties.
This not only guarantees the equal rights of the Tibetan people
in various areas, but is also beneficial to the administration and
economic and cultural development of various Tibetan autonomous
area. A handful of separatists in exile abroad have made the epithet
"Tibetan area" a political entity, purposely confusing
the terms "Tibet" and "Tibetan area." The intention
behind this is to influence public opinion towards the concept of
"Independence of the Greater Tibetan area," and separating
Tibet from the motherland, since some Westerners are not clear about
the historical distribution of Tibetans in China.
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