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India’s 4 Million-strong Diaspora Link with U.S. Comes to the Fore During Prime Minister Modi’s Visit – India West

Posted By on September 27, 2021

NEW DELHI The importance of the Indian diaspora has come to the fore in India-U.S. relations with both Prime Minister Narendra Modi and U.S. President Joe Biden highlighting this factor as part of the strengthening relationship between the worlds largest and oldest democracies.

President Biden during his bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Modi mentioned that "there are more than 4 million Indian Americans who are participating in the journey of progress of America."

Modi responded by saying: "As I look at the importance of this decade and the role that is going to be played by this talent of Indian Americans, I find that this people-to-people talent will play a greater role and Indian talent will be a co-partner in this relationship and I see that your contribution is going to be very important in this."

The diaspora factor was also very evident at Modi's meeting with U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris. He told Harris that "between India and the U.S., we have very vibrant and strong people-to-people connections, you know that all too well," referring to her Indian roots.

"More than 4 million people of Indian origin; the Indian community is a bridge between our two countries, a bridge of friendship and their contribution to the economies and societies of both our countries is indeed very praiseworthy," the prime minister pointed out.

With Indian Americans playing a crucial role in the technology sector it was only natural that at least two of the five top CEOs that Modi held a one-on-one meeting with in Washington were Indian Americans.

His meeting with Vivek Lall, chief executive of General Atomics Global Corporation, focused on strengthening the defense technology sector in India. Lall appreciated the recent policy changes to accelerate defense and emerging technology manufacturing in India. The company makes state-of-art drones which is a technology that India urgently requires to counter the growing threat from China in this field.

The discussion with Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen centered around the software technology company's ongoing collaboration and future investment plans in India. Discussions also focused on India's flagship program Digital India, and use of emerging technologies in sectors like health, education and R&D.

India with its huge market and skilled manpower offers an alternative investment destination for U.S. tech giants at a time when they are decoupling from an increasingly aggressive Communist China and looking to set up alternative supply chains.

In this backdrop, the prime minister met Cristiano Amon, CEO of leading computer chip maker Qualcomm, to present the investment opportunities in India's telecommunications and electronics sector. This included the recently launched Production Linked Incentive Scheme for Electronics System Design and Manufacturing as well as developments in the semiconductor supply chain in India. Strategies for building the local innovation ecosystem in India were also discussed.

Similarly, he took up the issues of cutting-edge solar equipment with the CEO of renewable energy major First Solar.

(The content is being carried under an arrangement with indianarrative.com)

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India's 4 Million-strong Diaspora Link with U.S. Comes to the Fore During Prime Minister Modi's Visit - India West

The PM in New York and the value of the diaspora – Kathimerini English Edition

Posted By on September 27, 2021

Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis is in New York for the United Nations General Assembly. His brief stay in the city has three aims. The first concerns drumming up support for Greeces positions vis-a-vis the tension with Turkey and promoting the countrys added value on the regional stage. The second is attracting foreign investment, and the third is coming into closer contact with Americas Greek diaspora.

Attention tends to be focused on the first two areas because of their importance to the countrys security and its economic trajectory. In this respect, it comes as no surprise that every Greek prime minister participating in the UN General Assembly uses their time on the podium and meetings on the sidelines to express Athens concerns about Ankaras behavior, to showcase Greeces potential role, but also to stress Greek positions and initiatives on a range of other important issues, among which is also climate change.

Contacts with businesspeople in the mecca of capitalism are also important and can yield gains. Everything, of course, is judged by results as a few meetings between ministers and prime ministers and businesspeople and funds are not enough, but there will, nevertheless, be quantifiable evidence of their effectiveness in the inflow of capital and the implementation of certain investments.

The third aspect of the Greek prime ministers visit to New York is also very important, however, particularly for the exchange of information and opinions with leading members of the diaspora who have a certain amount of influence on the political system of the worlds superpower.

Every diaspora organization plays a part some greater than others. The Archdiocese of America can also do its part. There are also mistakes being made, occasionally grave ones, even by people in positions of authority.

Overall, however, the Greek-American communitys influence is a reality. A typical example is the position of the president of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, Bob Menendez. The powerful lawmaker would not have taken such strong and clear positions and would not have influenced decisions as much as he does, were it not for his ties to the diaspora.

Even the meeting Mitsotakis has planned with Jewish American groups has been facilitated by the latters good cooperation with Greek Americans over the decades. The ground is even more fertile thanks to the deepening of Greek-Israeli ties on the bilateral level but also via agreements like the tripartite partnership with Cyprus that eventually became a 3+1 partnership with the United States in the role of observer.

Returning to the Greek diaspora, and particularly that in the worlds most powerful country, politically, militarily and economically, it is clear that it has a vital role to play. So, in this respect, the prime ministers speech at the UN, his diplomatic contacts and his meetings with potential investors are certainly important, but attention must also be given to the diasporas added value, which Greece has every reason to take advantage of and cultivate. To do so, it must strengthen the relationship in every aspect, most importantly institutionally.

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The PM in New York and the value of the diaspora - Kathimerini English Edition

Lead Me to Life: Voices of the African Diaspora – SAPIENS

Posted By on September 27, 2021

In 2020, George Floyds murder by Derek Chauvin, a White police officer in Minneapolis, flared a global nerve. Black Lives Matter protestors stood up against anti-Black racism and police violencebringing to the fore how colonial and imperial systems have not died but morphed into new forms of state surveillance, suppression, and violence against Black and Brown people around the globe.

In response, wea team of editors, poets, and anthropologists based in the U.S.put out a call for anthropologists of the African diaspora to share their creative work with us. We asked them to offer their voices and perspectives on this moment and on the 500-year history of African diaspora and culture that began with the transatlantic trade of enslaved Africans. They met this call by bringing a wholeness to their storytelling, working to dismantle dominant narratives and ways of knowing, refusing the White gaze, and claiming personal experiences as powerful ethnographic material that can shape hearts and minds and futures.

The resulting collection, Lead Me to Life: Voices of the African Diaspora, uses creative scholarship to bring nearer a shared future of safety, vitality, equality, and justice for all those of the African diaspora. Through explorations of family and ancestry, the personal/autobiographical, how the past echoes into today, and the human hurts of social inequality, the collection contributes to a 2021 global reckoning with anti-Black racism, anti-queer violence, sexism, anti-Asian hate, European colonialism and slaverys afterlives, and much more.

As academics, we know that scholarship alone will not bring about the change many of us seek. Poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction, among other genres, are essential to how we embody and experience our always shifting worlds. Throughout the African diaspora, creative works carry the weight of social change.

In putting together this collection, we were inspired by influential works such as literary scholar and cultural historian Saidiya Hartmans essay Venus in Two Acts, which wrestles with the elision of Black girls from the public memory of racial violence. Through an encounter with archival documents about an enslaved dead girl named Venus who died on board a British slave ship named Recovery as recorded in 1792, Hartman delves into the traffic between fantasy, fact, violence, and desire in an interrogation of the archive (the documents, statements, and institutions that decide our knowledge of the past) of Black life.

Poetry pushes us to reckon with the deeper truths of social repair.

Using critical fabulation, the splicing and reconfiguring of the scant information in the archives, Hartman troubles assumed narratives and rewrites against collective amnesia. Her work shows us what it means to be Black in the worldspecifically, to be Black and female in the Americas and trying to survive in the afterlives of the Middle Passage, slavery, and its residual terrors. Hartman shows what it is to split ones Black self in two as a means of navigating the tenuous mortality of Black intimacy, Black community, and Black life.

We also turned to poetryas people often do in times of personal and social crisis. Popular works of poetry, such as Claudia Rankines Citizen: An American Lyric, are already essential reading for this current moment of racial reckoning in the United States. Citizens powerful lyric arcs between words and media, pushing the boundaries of the lyric poetry form to reveal the distortions of racism and warping of social ties. Poetry is open-ended. This openness allows a poet to grapple with unthinkable or barely thinkable violences that are hidden in everyday lifeand, as readers and listeners, poetry pushes us to reckon with the deeper truths of social repair.

But more than asking contributors to respond to ongoing acts of racism and violence, and the uprisings, we sought work that spoke to African diaspora survivance (active, ongoing presence), Black joy, freedom dreams, collective healing, and other empowered practices.

The voices in this collection rise from many sites around the globe.

The African diaspora includes worldwide communities of native Africans and people of African descent who move or are the descendants of those who moved through global systems of enslavement, colonialism, nation-building, and immigration. In the Americas, the diaspora community focuses mainly on descendants of the transatlantic slave trade of the 16th through the 19th centuries. The United States may have banned the slave trade in 1808, and legally abolished slavery in 1865, but the country did not dismantle many systems of oppression linked to the slave system. The works grapple with these ongoing histories.

Dina Riveras poem Middle Ground speaks directly to the dear ones who have lived, and are living, in this diaspora. As an Afro-Taino archaeologist based in Florida, she navigates a system intent on dehumanizing and disenfranchising Black and Indigenous people, among others, which, as she says, is an exhausting dance between survival and a preventable death. Riveras letter-poem reaches out to herself and others of the diaspora: Dear one, / Grant your pounding heart a moment / Your steps may falter in a world that blames you. Her timely poem Riot zeros in on protestors who bleed the dark secrets / Reflected in riot shields and badges.

In The Voice of Diaspora, Black Brazilian poet and archaeologist Lara de Paula Passos speaks in the imagined voice of diaspora, offering a poetic definition that is rooted in her personal experience and family history: I am Diaspora / and also Colony / Made of Love and Ammonia. Embracing the contradictions of a community built on a shared violent history, Passos poem gestures toward forms of belonging beyond national borders and legal citizenship. In its strongest expression, diaspora models more inclusive ways of sharing identity that trouble simplistic racial or nationalistic categories.

Poet and author Jason Vasser-Elong, of Cameroonian descent, offers a trio of poemsElder, Window, and Lessons We Learnthat are intimate portraits of family heritage in the United States. Ethnographic richness animates his recollections of road trips through woods tinged with memory: There may even come a time / when a forest will only be trees. / But for now, its the setting for a memory / not mine, but ours. We come away from his poems imagining a world that might be all ours but seen from unfamiliar angles and perspectives: nights so black, so lit with stars / that one could imagine that its dark everywhere.

Elder by Jason Vasser-Elong

Theyll Steal Your Eyes, Theyll Steal Your Teeth by Cory-Alice Andr-Johnson (October 1)

Are We So Different? by Irma McClaurin (October 8)

Middle Ground by Dina Rivera (October 15)

The Voice of Diaspora by Lara de Paula Passos (October 22)

Window by Jason Vasser-Elong (October 29)

Riot by Dina Rivera (November 5)

Surfing in Color by Traben Pleasant (November 12)

Lessons We Learn by Jason Vasser-Elong (November 19)

Anthropologist Cory-Alice Andr-Johnson, who works in and writes about Madagascar, offers the only work of fiction in the collection. In her story, Theyll Steal Your Eyes, Theyll Steal Your Teeth, local children are disappearingor being stolen. She uses gossip about the missing children to investigate how different kinds of talk embody or refuse the demands of those in power. Her story reveals the inequalities at the heart of postcolonial contexts such as Madagascar, where race, capitalism, imperialism, and class, among other forces, shape speech, communities, and rights. Gossip about vazaha (a Malagasy term for foreigners, who are largely Europeans or of European descent) hides and unveils what people know or dont know in a cadence of uncertainty: Nobody knows. Ask anyone. Everybody knows. They take people. They take land. They take bones. Vazaha take vacations. They take pictures. Andre-Johnsons piece highlights how ethnographic fiction can expertly and powerfully combine rigorous field research with creative writing methods.

Black surfer and anthropologist Traben Pleasant draws us into the waters of Bocas del Toro, Panama, to witness African diaspora riding waves across the surfable globe. Hailing from Long Beach, California, Pleasant typically found himself the only Black surfer in sight. While doing ethnographic work in Panama, one day he became immersed in a scene that brought elation and questions: a palette of Black canvas-ridersnone of whom aligned with the White sport narrative that says, Blacks cant swim. His poem Surfing in Color broadens the lens through time and space of the range of Black surfers who have thrilled in riding waves.

Centering us back in the U.S. but with a broad lens, poet and anthropologist Irma McClaurins contribution Are We So Different? was first commissioned for the American Anthropological Associations project on race in the United States called RACE: Are We So Different? Crafted to respond to white supremacist violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, her piece reminds us: We can choose to enmesh ourselves / in prejudices and racism, / or choose to be humane.

Carving spaces of influence outside and inside of academia, our contributors help us feel the significance of the past and call us toward humane, just, and joyful futures. To do this celebratory and healing work often requires writers to immerse themselves in troubling watersa task augmented by the trial of experiencing the various inequalities, deaths, and oppressions committed in real time upon those who make up the African diaspora.

We as editors highlight and take account of the enduring courage and craft it takes to creatively transmit ones lived reality of Black joys, pains, loves, and losses to the world.

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Lead Me to Life: Voices of the African Diaspora - SAPIENS

Divide, Depoliticize, and Demobilize: China’s Strategies for Controlling the Tibetan Diaspora – Jamestown – The Jamestown Foundation

Posted By on September 27, 2021

Introduction

Last fall, the Tibetan community in New York City was scandalized by news that a New York Police Department (NYPD) officer named Baimadajie Angwang, allegedly of Tibetan ethnicity, had been arrested and charged with spying on the local Tibetan community for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) (New York Times, September 21, 2020). Court filings alleged that Angwang had been affiliated with the CCP since at least 2014 (Eastern District of New York U.S. Attorneys Office, September 21, 2020). While news of Angwangs arrest intrigued national media and intensified Washingtons growing concern about Chinas overseas influence operations, Tibetans have long felt the creeping presence of Chinese espionage activities in their communities. Traditional exile hubs like Dharamsala and Kathmandu have been menaced for decades, but this problem has now spread to Western outposts of the Tibetan diaspora.

Beijing has historically viewed the Tibetan diasporawith its resilient exile government and highly effective transnational advocacy movementas a threat to Chinas international reputation and its foreign policy objectives. This was especially so during its heyday in the late nineties and the early aughts, when the international Tibet movement dealt Beijing several defeats on the global stagefrom thwarting Chinas bid for the 2000 Olympics to foiling a high-stakes World Bank loan that would have enabled Beijing to transfer some 60,000 Chinese settlers into eastern Tibet (Los Angeles Times, September 24, 1993; World Bank, April 28, 2000). During this time, Beijing began expanding its overseas influence operations targeting the Tibetan diaspora, refining its strategies and innovating new tactics to counter the Tibet movement.

But how does Beijing actually counter the Tibetan diasporas opposition to China? What are the methods it uses to co-opt or neutralize Tibetans living in free democracies in the West? This article provides a preliminary answer to these questions using firsthand observations, policy reports, court documents, and personal interviews. The case of Baimadajie Angwang provides a glimpse into some of the tools and tactics that Beijing uses to infiltrate communities, depoliticize institutions, and silence individuals in the Tibetan diaspora.

Infiltrating Communities: Divide, Depoliticize, Demobilize

The motivations driving Chinas efforts to infiltrate the Tibetan diaspora are different from those behind its standard espionage programs that target the American defense industry or multinational corporations in the West. While the Tibetan community has neither military secrets nor cutting-edge technology, it has a vibrant transnational advocacy movement that Beijing has long sought to undermine. Outside of the Indian subcontinent, New York City has the largest and most dynamic Tibetan exile population, which makes it a prime target for the United Front Work Department (UFWD), the agency of the Chinese government responsible for managing or pre-empting potential sources of opposition to CCP rule.[1]

The first objective of Chinese infiltration into the Tibetan diaspora is to divide the community. At the direction of the UFWD, agents seek to sow seeds of division or fan pre-existing tensions within the diaspora. In conversations between Angwang and his handler at the Chinese consulate in New York that were recorded and published in the FBIs court affidavit, they discuss the need to develop relationships with religious minorities in the Tibetan communitysuch as Catholics and Muslimsand, in particular, to exploit sectarian tensions within Tibetan Buddhism.

Notably, Angwang names the Shugden issuethe most disruptive sectarian conflict to bedevil Tibetan Buddhism in the last century.He explains to his boss at the Chinese consulate that members of the Bujie Xiongdan (sic) group have been discriminated against and neglected in the Tibetan community and will therefore easily feel the warmth of the motherland if the consulate were to cultivate them (U.S. District Court of the Eastern District of New York, September 19, 2020).[2] This rationale is undergirded by a classic divide and co-opt strategy that Beijing has implemented for years, not only against Tibetans, but also against Uyghurs and other ethnic or religious minorities living overseas. Extensive investigative reporting by Reuters has shown that Shugden groups waging a highly organized international smear campaign against the Dalai Lama had been co-opted by Beijing, citing a leaked internal Chinese government document from 2014 that referred to the Shugden issue as an important front in our struggle against the Dalai clique (Reuters, December 21, 2015).

Another objective of Chinese infiltration is to depoliticize the Tibetan diaspora. The condition of exile tends to politicize people, which leads in turn to mobilization and activism. To counter this, Beijing wants to depoliticize the Tibetan diaspora, including its social associations and cultural institutions, with a view to demobilizing the Tibetan freedom movement. This strategic thinking is reflected in Angwangs exchanges with the leaders of the Tibetan Community of New York and New Jersey, the association that caters to the several thousand Tibetan residents of the greater New York metropolitan area.

In February 2019, at a Tibetan New Year event where Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was the guest of honor, the Tibetan activist and parliamentarian Dorjee Tseten gave a speech that touched on Chinas human rights violations in Tibet (Students for a Free Tibet, February 9, 2019). Following the gathering, Angwang dropped in on a post-event debrief meeting at the community center, where he criticized the political nature of Mr. Tsetens speech and advised that the community center be made a politics-free zone. He further suggested that he could bring in wealthy Chinese Buddhists who might donate to the community center and alleviate its mortgage burden if the association would tone down its advocacy for Tibetan freedom and human rights.[3]

Angwangs suggestions to depoliticize the Tibetan community center and its activities were ignored by the associations leaders. But it is not hard to imagine an alternate scenario where less scrupulous or less sophisticated executives might have accepted the promise of financial assistance at the cost of political self-censorship. Angwangs offer exemplifies the Faustian bargain that Beijings agents propose to Tibet-related organizations and institutions (often in subtle ways that leave room for deniability). This strategy has found some success in limited circles with some religious foundations and cultural institutions censoring content that is critical of China. Mainstream Tibetan organizations and public institutions have so far proven resilient against Beijings community-level stratagemspossibly because their relative transparency and inherently political nature make them less susceptible to bribery than private or cultural groups. Meanwhile, a more sophisticated tool has emerged in Beijings arsenal, one that relies on targeting individuals rather than community infiltration and weaponizes familial relationships rather than financial rewards.

Neutralizing Individuals: The Visa-as-Bait Strategy

One of the most potent tools that Beijing wields against the Tibetan diaspora is access to family. All exiles dream of the home they left behind. For exiles who have elderly parents back home, this yearning can turn into desperation in the event of parental sickness or other emergencies. In the exiles desire to visit their ancestral home and reconnect with their families, Beijing sees a strategic vulnerability. For example, Angwang clearly recognized the lure of the visa as a means to convert or neutralize individuals in the diaspora. According to the FBI complaint, he appears to have suggested that issuing ten-year visas to Tibetans in the United States might assist their recruitment as intelligence assets.[4]

Historically, Tibetans came into exile in two big wavesone in the aftermath of Chinese invasion in the 1950s and the other in the liberalization era of the 1980s. Almost everyone in the second group has older parents, many of whom remain in Tibet. In the mid-2000s, Chinese consulates started issuing visas to carefully vetted Tibetan exiles, allowing them to make short trips to visit family in Tibet, albeit under the close supervision of UFWD minders. As word of these secret but sensational trips spread throughout the diaspora, more Tibetans began lining up at Chinese consulates in the hope of securing access to their ancestral homeland.

The Chinese visa application process is anything but straightforward for Tibetans, even those who are naturalized U.S. citizens (U.S. CECC Testimony, September 30, 2020). At the Chinese consulate in New York, for instance, instead of going through the main consulate window where general applicants are processed, Tibetan applicants are taken to a separate area where they are grilled by a liaison officer. They are made to write down their personal stories, name all the groups they have ever joined, and state whether they have ever participated in a protest against China. Sometimes, when an applicant answers that she has never been to a protest, the officer might sternly invite her to look at his computer screenshowing a picture of the applicant at a Tibet rallybefore rejecting her application.[5]

More disturbingly, Tibetan applicants are made to provide the names, locations, occupations, and other identification details of their relatives in Tibet. Each piece of information surrendered to the consulate is a data point that Beijing uses to map the Tibetan diaspora, linking the individual exile to their more vulnerable family members back home. This transnational relationship mapping is designed to seed a hypothetical sense of guilt in the conscience of the exile; it is meant to instill in the targeted individual the advance feeling that her political participation in exile might endanger her family in Tibet. The ultimate goal of this tactic, which a recent report by a Uyghur rights group has aptly called coercion by proxy, is the political deactivation of the exile.[6]

Tibetans are far from the only community affected by Chinas long arm. Beijings ambitious foreign influence campaign uses a sophisticated set of tools, tactics, and strategies to conduct what can only be described as repression without borders against a host of potential opponents abroad (U.S. CECC Testimony, September 30, 2020). One of its key strategies is the weaponization of accessto markets, funding, and family.

In targeting the Tibetan diaspora, the weaponization of access to family is a strategy that Beijing has refined to perfection. One of the sources interviewed by the author in the United States recounted how, toward the end of her last trip to Tibet, her United Front minders explicitly reminded her that her political behavior going forward would determine not only her future chances of securing a visa, but also the safety and well-being of the family she had just visited. In short, her family in Tibet is the hostage, and her silence in exile is the ransomwhich she must pay everyday by refraining from actions online or offline that may be perceived as critical of the Chinese government. In other words, she has been neutralized.

According to recent news reports, the United Fronts sustained overseas efforts to collect data on diaspora-homeland linkages are being complemented by more aggressive local data-gathering drives in Tibet. Chinese authorities have reportedly harassed Tibetan families in Shigatse, Tingri, Nagchu and Kardze prefectures, urging them to give up names and details of all their known relatives in exile (RFA, July 30).

Another source recounted an incident that illustrates a different pathway by which this neutralizing force operates. A Tibetan man living in Europe was nominated as a new board candidate for the local chapter of Chushi Gangdruk.[7] He received enough votes to become a nominee, but received a call from his family in Tibet before he could participate in the next round of elections the following weekend. Chinese authorities had just visited and made cryptic remarks about the recent political activity of their children abroad. The family understood this as a veiled threat and promptly called their exiled son. He immediately withdrew his name from the slate of candidates: he, too, has been neutralized.

Conclusion

In the long run, Chinas visa-as-bait strategy of targeting individuals may prove to be more effective in its efforts to demobilize the Tibetan diaspora than its community infiltration tactics. Spying for China represents such a dramatic departure from the social norm that it remains unthinkable for the vast majority of Tibetan exiles. It is a bold red line that few are willing to cross. People like Angwang, who are recruited into the ranks of Chinas secret agents, are rare in the Tibetan diaspora, and his unique background shows that he is the exception that proves the rule.[8]

Unlike traditional espionage, seeking access to ones family in the ancestral homeland is part of normalized exile behavior, even if it comes at the cost of political self-censorship. In theory, the silencing of one individual voice in a broad-based grassroots movement inflicts no great loss on the collective cause. But in reality, there are significant social and political costs when a growing number of individuals use the same logic to justify their respective silence. Individual actions, no matter how insignificant, have collective consequences. What begins as the silence of an individual can end in the collective surrender of an entire movement.

The tactics and strategies discussed here are only a handful of the pathways through which the Chinese government works to divide, depoliticize, and eventually demobilize the global Tibetan diaspora. While some of its tactics are illegal, many are not. But all of them are aimed at creating a world in which transnational political activism on behalf of human rights in general, and Tibetan freedom in particular, becomes severely curtailed.

Tenzin Dorjee is a senior researcher at Tibet Action Institute and a PhD candidate at Columbia University.

Notes

[1] For more on the United Front Work Department, see: Alexander Bowe, Chinas Overseas United Front Work: Background and Implications for the United States, U.S-China Economic and Security Review Commission, August 24, 2018, https://www.uscc.gov/research/chinas-overseas-united-front-work-background-and-implications-united-states.

[2] Note that this appears to be a mistranscription of the name of the controversial deity Dorje Shugden, which is often translated into Mandarin as either , duojie xiongdeng, or , duojie xiongtian.

Editors Note: The Shugden controversy refers to a sectarian divide in Tibetan Buddhism surrounding the deity Dorje Shugden, historically propitiated by a subgroup of the Geluk school, one of five major schools in Tibetan Buddhism. The worship of this deity, believed to be responsible for fueling Geluk supremacy and sectarian intolerance, has been discouraged by the Dalai Lama, who belongs to the Geluk school. This theological disagreement has caused a split within Tibetan Buddhism and resulted in significant division in the Tibetan diaspora.

[3] This account is based on multiple conversations the author had with community leaders and organizers who had interacted with Baimadajie Angwang between November 2018 to April 2019.

[4] United States of America v. Baimadajie Angwang, Criminal Complaint filed by the FBI, https://www.justice.gov/opa/press-release/file/1318496/download, p14.

[5] Note that there are no systematic studies of the rate at which Tibetan applications for China visas are approved, partly because many Tibetans who apply choose not to reveal that information. Nevertheless, it is common knowledge among the diaspora that a very small percentage of the applicants actually end up receiving a visa and the special permit required to visit Tibet. But even those whose applications are rejected have eventually surrendered their data to the United Front Work Department. See: Testimony of Tenzin Dorjee, Tibet Action Institute, Before the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, CECC, September 30, 2020, https://www.cecc.gov/sites/chinacommission.house.gov/files/documents/Dorjee%20CECC%20Testimony%20Final%20Final.pdf.

[6] No Space Left to Run: Chinas Transnational Repression of Uyghurs, Uyghur Human Rights Project, June 23, 2021, https://uhrp.org/report/no-space-left-to-run-chinas-transnational-repression-of-uyghurs/.

[7] The specific country is purposely omitted here because naming the country might give away the identity of the individual concerned. Note that Chushi Gangdruk is a well-known political organization that once waged a guerrilla campaign against Chinese invasion in the 1950s and 1960s, but it is today a civil society group using nonviolent means to promote the Tibetan cause.

[8] There has been heated debate in the Tibetan community about the authenticity of Angwangs claims to Tibetan identity. While he is allegedly from Gyalrong, a far-eastern Tibetan region that has undergone a degree of cultural assimilation into China, he does not appear to speak any of the standard Tibetan dialects understood in exile; he was using English or Chinese in all of his conversations with New York-based Tibetans. Both his parents work(ed) for the Chinese government and are members or former members of the Chinese Communist Party. In my interviews with people who had interacted with him, I have been able to confirm that he has an uncle who is a bona fide exiled Tibetan.

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Divide, Depoliticize, and Demobilize: China's Strategies for Controlling the Tibetan Diaspora - Jamestown - The Jamestown Foundation

The Irish Times view on Irish diaspora during the pandemic: Stories of hardship – The Irish Times

Posted By on September 27, 2021

When the history of Irelands Covid-19 crisis is written, the experience of the diaspora will merit far more attention than it has received during the pandemic itself. Even in normal times, the States rhetorical commitment to its residents living overseas far exceeds its will to tend to their particular needs, but the absence of the Irish abroad from public discourse over the past 18 months has been striking nonetheless.

People living in Ireland were affected in different ways by the pandemic; the same naturally goes for emigrants, for whom there is no single experience of the emergency. But for many in the community, particularly those who retain close ties to home, the challenges of living under stressful, restrictive conditions overseas often in places with much worse epidemics than Irelands and with health systems ill-equipped to respond were compounded by a loss of access to home.

Some of those pressures are captured in a new report by the Crosscare Migrant Project, which documents the stories of Irish emigrants in the UK, the US, Canada and Australia during the pandemic. It is a story of selflessness and fortitude Irish healthcare workers were on the frontlines across the world but also of loneliness and financial struggle. Older, more vulnerable emigrants found themselves isolated, while many of the Irish who work in temporary roles, particularly in hospitality, had to cope with sudden financial insecurity because their immigration status did not entitle them to income or social welfare supports. Many recount having to watch the funerals of loved ones online.

The diaspora has always been an important emotional and symbolic part of Irelands self-image. In recent years the State has begun to think about the overseas Irish in a more serious and considered way, with formal strategies that seek to ensure the welfare of emigrants while extending Irish influence through those overseas networks.

Some of those ties will have frayed over the past year-and-a-half. Mending them should be a priority.

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The Irish Times view on Irish diaspora during the pandemic: Stories of hardship - The Irish Times

E/Merge: Art of the Indian Diaspora | 09/24/2021 – Choose Chicago

Posted By on September 27, 2021

Thanks to the generosity of Umang and Paragi Patel, the National Indo-American Museum (NIAM), which builds bridges across generations and connects cultures through the diverse colorful stories of Indian Americans, takes residence at its first brick and mortar home at 815 S. Main Street in Lombard, Illinois. The Umang and Paragi Patel Center opens to the public on Friday September 24, 2021 with an inaugural exhibition, E/Merge: Art of the Indian Diaspora.

With major funding provided by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, E/Merge showcases contemporary, cutting-edge works created by nine renowned Indian-American visual artists from across the United States. Curated by Shaurya Kumar, chair of faculty and associate professor at School of the Art Institute Chicago, the exhibition includes artists who have traversed international borders and adopted the United States as their new home.

In an essay for the exhibitions catalog, Kumar wrote, Works in the exhibition challenge the pre-conceptions of what and how diasporic artists represent themselves and their histories and investigates the notions of origins, narratives of dispersal, and cultural differences under the conditions of globalism. Where do we, as members of the Indian diaspora in the U.S. and elsewhere, locate ourselves in a time of globalization and mass migration? How does the work of contemporary artists locate itself in timepast, present, or future? How does the meaning of a work change when an artist or an artwork attempts to unpack multiple and multi-site narratives beyond the binary of master and counter-narratives? These questions form the premise of E/Merge.

The nine artists whose works appear in the exhibition are:Avantika Bawa, Vancouver, WashingtonSarika Goulatia, Pittsburgh, PennsylvaniaSreshta Rit Premnath, New York, New YorkKaveri Raina, New York, New YorkNandita Raman, New York, New YorkSurabhi Saraf, New York, New YorkKuldeep Singh, New York, New YorkNeha Vedpathak, Detroit, MichiganKushala Vora, Chicago, IllinoisArtist portraits, biographies, and images of artworks are available here.

Tamara Biggs, director of exhibitions at the Chicago History Museum and a past president of NIAMs board, is serving as producer of the E/Merge exhibition and catalog. She has been instrumental in NIAMs initiative to open the Umang and Paragi Patel Center with a meaningful art exhibition and has guided the process of developing the exhibition and opening the museum.

Monthly programming during the run of the exhibition is in development. Current plans call for artist talks, scholarly panels, family art-making days, and a dance performance featuring art-inspired original choreography.

NIAM has established the following mandatory COVID-19 protocols: Wear a mask or appropriate face covering over nose and mouth. Maintain six feet social distance at all times. Carry proof of vaccination and/or negative PCR test and produce when asked by museum officials. Stay home if displaying flu-like symptoms or recently exposed to the virus. Use hand sanitizers provided.

NIAM will revise these protocols as necessary per the guidance of the CDC and local officials. For more information, visit cdc.gov.

E/MERGE Art of the Indian Diaspora opens Friday, September 24 as the inaugural exhibition of the National Indo-American Museums new home, the Umang and Paragi Patel Center, 815 S. Main Street, Lombard, Illinois.

Museum/exhibition opening hours:Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m.5 p.m.Group tours are available by appointment.

Adult admission at the door is $5, 10% discount for groups of 10 or more.Student admission is $3, free for those attending art classes.Admission for children younger than 12 is free (except groups).Free parking is available. All programming is subject to change.For information, visit niam.org.

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E/Merge: Art of the Indian Diaspora | 09/24/2021 - Choose Chicago

Strengthening alliances, investments and the Greek Diaspora on the agenda of Kyriakos Mitsotakis in New York – Hellenic News of America

Posted By on September 27, 2021

Emphasis on the strengthening of Greece internationally through the strengthening of its wide network of alliances at regional and international level, highlighting the positive perspective that opens up for the Greek economy with the immediate goal of becoming a pole of attraction for significant investments, but also strengthening relations with the private sector. The Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, is expected to give an active Greek community during his trip to New York in the framework of the 76th General Assembly of the United Nations.

Although the new outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic worldwide, due to the prevalence of the D mutation, significantly reduces the meetings, but also the number of members of the delegations, the agenda of the meetings of the Greek Prime Minister is rich. Kyriakos Mitsotakiss goal, as explained by competent government sources, is to strengthen the dynamism and extroversion that the country exudes, while emphasizing its leading role in the wider region, but also in Europe. To show, as the same people emphasize, that Greece is firmly at the forefront of meeting modern challenges, taking initiatives for the new bets of the time, such as climate change and environmental protection.

The issue of the joint fight against the climate crisis is going to have a prominent place in the speech of the Greek Prime Minister in the context of the 76th UN General Assembly, early Friday afternoon, New York time. Kyriakos Mitsotakis is expected to recall the important initiatives, but also the measurable goals, which have already been adopted by the Greek government to address the climate crisis, noting that decisive action is urgent, otherwise, as stressed at the recent Summit. of the countries of the South of the European Union (EUMED9) the consequences will be tragic for everyone.

The Greek Prime Minister is also expected to make a special reference to security issues in the Southeastern Mediterranean, making it clear in all directions that security and stability in the wider region go through good neighborly relations, based on respect for international law, but also of the Convention on the Law of the Sea. In this context, it is expected to once again call on Turkey to abandon delinquency and provocations against Greece and Cyprus. Besides, Cypriot and Greek-Turkish is expected to be the main menu of Mr. Mitsotakis meeting with UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres tomorrow, Thursday.

In fact, in the context of strengthening the regional role of the country, the participation of the Greek Prime Minister in a dinner, given by the President of the European Council, Charles Michel, to leaders of European and African countries tonight in New York. Mr. Mitsotakis has also scheduled a meeting with the President of the Presidential Council of Libya, Mohamed Menfi. Tomorrow morning, moreover, the Greek Prime Minister will have a meeting with the leaders of American-Jewish organizations.

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Mr. Mitsotakis is expected to give special weight to his contacts with the strong Greek Diaspora, which, as government sources note, see Greece changing and becoming fashionable on the other side of the Atlantic. In fact, the Greek Prime Minister is expected to have important contacts with members and representatives of the Greek Diaspora at a dinner, which will be attended tomorrow night in the American metropolis. On Friday morning, Mr. Mitsotakis will meet with the Archbishop of America, Elpidoforos.

Besides, the Greek Prime Minister is expected to explore the prospect of increasing foreign investments in our country during his contacts with important investors in New York. One such will be tomorrow Thursday with the president of Microsoft, Brad Smith, with whom Mr. Mitsotakis maintains an excellent personal relationship. The government also points to the large investment of Microsoft in Athens, but also the sponsorship of the American colossus for a digital tour of ancient Olympia, while reminding that the Prime Minister had met and met with Mr. Smith at his Economic Forum. Davos in January 2020.

On Friday morning, Kyriakos Mitsotakis is expected to visit Ground Zero on the occasion of the commemoration of the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the Twin Towers, on September 11, 2001.

SOURCE: AMNA

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Strengthening alliances, investments and the Greek Diaspora on the agenda of Kyriakos Mitsotakis in New York - Hellenic News of America

Abbas gives Israel one year to leave Palestinian …

Posted By on September 27, 2021

Speaking at the UNGA, the PA leader accused Israel of apartheid and ethnic cleansing and threatened to withdraw recognition of the state unless it withdraws from the Palestinian territory.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has given Israel one year to withdraw from occupied territory and threatened to withdraw recognition Israel if it failed to do so.

In a virtual address to the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) on Friday, Abbas said he would no longer recognise Israel based on pre-1967 borders a cornerstone of three decades of failed peace efforts if it refused to withdraw from the territories Palestinians want for a future state.

We must state that Israel, the occupying power, has one year to withdraw from the Palestinian territory it occupied in 1967, including East Jerusalem, Abbas said.

If this is not achieved, why maintain recognition of Israel based on the 1967 borders?

The Palestinian leader also called on UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to convene an international peace conference and expressed his willingness to work throughout the year on solving the final status of the states of Israel and Palestine in accordance with United Nations resolutions.

Speaking against a backdrop of maps of the region showing Israels territorial expansion over several decades, Abbas accused Israel of apartheid and ethnic cleansing, using terms rarely employed for the sake of ongoing negotiations on a two-state solution.

He added that the Palestinians were ready to go to the International Court of Justice on the issue of the legality of the occupation of the land of the Palestinian state.

Israel has brushed aside the Palestinian leaders demands. Gilad Erdan, the Israeli ambassador to the UN, said those who truly support peace and negotiations do not threaten delusional ultimatums from the UN platform as he did in his speech.

Erdan said Abbass speech had proved once again that he is no longer relevant.

The peace process to achieve a two-state solution has been deadlocked for years.

Palestinians say Israels proposals would fail to grant them full statehood or resolve other core issues, including the fate of Palestinian refugees and the status of Jerusalem.

Israel captured the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza in the 1967 war and has not put an end to its illegal occupation of the seized territories, which the Palestinians want for their future state.

Palestinian recognition of Israel has been the foundation of the 1993 Oslo accords, a landmark moment in the pursuit of peace between the two sides.

Israels Prime Minister Naftali Bennett is opposed to the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, widely seen by the international community as the only way to resolve the conflict.

Abbas has been facing backlash at home. Palestinians frustrated by his long and increasingly authoritarian rule, as well as security cooperation with Israel have been staging protests following the death of an outspoken critic of the Palestinian Authority while in its custody.

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Abbas gives Israel one year to leave Palestinian ...

What is Palestine and who are Palestinians?

Posted By on September 27, 2021

PALESTINE has been marred by conflict for years as tensions with Israel continue to rage on in the modern day.

But what is Palestine and why has there been fighting with Israel? Here's what you need to know.

5

Palestine is a small region of land in the Mediterranean and is home to the Arabic speaking Palestinian community.

The history of Palestine has been marred by frequent political conflict and violence because of its importance to several major world religions.

This is because it sits as a gateway between Africa and Asia.

In the past 100 years this conflict has been between the Arabic and Jewish communities who have clashed over who owns the region and who has the right to live there.

Despite being renamed as Israel in 1948, 135 United Nations members still recognize Palestine as an Independent State.

However, Israel itself, as well as other nations including the United States, dont make that distinction

5

Palestine is comprisedmostly of partsof modernIsrael and also features Palestinianterritories of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank.

After the borders were reformed in 1948, they have changed on a regular basis.

In the modern day, Palestinian communities are now split apart given that the vast majority of the territory is controlled by Israel.

According to Vox, this means that the Palestinian connection to the land has weakened, as Jewish communities put down roots in the territory.

In effect, the current borders blurs or constrains the boundaries of any future Palestinian state.

Arab people who call this territory home are known as Palestinians.

The people of Palestine have a strong desire to create a free and independent state for their community.

Palestinians are of the Muslim faith and speak Arabic.

There are estimated to be 4,750,000 Palestinians globally with 300,000 living in Jerusalem, according to a 2015 census.

5

The Israel Palestinian conflict has rumbled on for decades, having begun over a dispute between land and borders.

The area of land in question, formerly known as Palestine, was initially inhabited by a Jewish minority and an Arab majority.

TIMELINE OF EVENTS

1917 British seizes Palestine from Ottomans

1920 European Jewish migration, which increased in the 19th century, begins to gather pace.

1940s World War II and Holocaust saw Jews arrive in vast numbers as they fled persecution and later sought out a homeland.

1948 - As British rulers leave, the Jewish leaders living there declared the creation of the state of Israel.

However, many Arabs already living in the area objected to this and war between the two parties followed.

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled or were forced out of their homes in the process in what they the call 'The Catastrophe.'

5

1949 - By the time the fighting ended in a ceasefire the following year, Israel controlled most of the territory.

1967 - After another war, Israel then fully occupied the Palestinian areas where their troops remained for many years.

Neither they nor their descendants have been allowed by Israel to return to their homes.

This is because Israel believes this would overwhelm the country and threaten its existence as a Jewish state.

Israel claims the whole of Jerusalem as its capital, while the Palestinians claim East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state.

In the past 50 years Israel has built settlements in these areas, where more than 600,000 Jews now live.

Palestinians say these are illegal under international law and are obstacles to peace, but Israel denies this.

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What is Palestine and who are Palestinians?

Palestine Solidarity Campaign – Wikipedia

Posted By on September 27, 2021

UK advocacy organization

The Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) is an activist organisation in England and Wales that promotes solidarity with the Palestinian people. It was founded in 1982 during the build-up to the first war between Israel and Lebanon[citation needed], and was incorporated in the UK in 2004 as Palestine Solidarity Campaign Ltd.[1]

The PSC says it campaigns for peace and justice for Palestinians[non-primary sources needed], in support of international law and human rights. The PSC's stated goals include the right of return for Palestinians and Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories.[2] It has stated that it opposes both "Israels occupation and its aggression against neighbouring states".[3] The PSC has criticised Israel's practices when arresting children.[4] PSC states that it is "opposed to all forms of racism, including anti-Jewish prejudice and Islamophobia".[5] Critics, including one of the founders, have claimed that it's members regularly cross the line from legitimate criticism Israel into anti-Semitic speech.[6][7]

Whilst recognising differences between apartheid-era South Africa and Israel[non-primary sources needed], PSC promotes the boycotting of Israeli goods as a method that it believes was previously successful in achieving political change.[8] PSC chapters have run workshops on such questions as "How to deal with Zionists' arguments; what to say to those who call us anti-Semitic" and "What are settlements? What will boycotting Israeli goods achieve?"[9]

The PSC has an executive committee of 20 members, plus two members representing the PSC's Trade Union Advisory Committee, who are elected at the Annual General Meeting by its members. Its current chair is Hugh Lanning and its current director is Ben Jamal.[10] Based in London, there are four staff members while the organisation relies on volunteers to perform many tasks, such as running campaigns and managing branch offices.[5] [non-primary sources needed]

Most of PSC's directors have not been of Palestinian or Middle Eastern descent[citation needed]. One of its founders, Tony Greenstein, is also a founder of Jews for Boycotting Israeli Goods.[6]

The PSC has about 40 branches in England, Scotland and Wales, listed on its website.[11] The organisation's activity in Scotland is co-ordinated by the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign.

The Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign is a separate organisation set up in late 2001 by established Irish human rights and community activists.[12]

PSC has officially supported the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement since 2001. A study published in The Jewish Chronicle has been reported as recognising the PSC as one of the main proponents of the BDS movement in Britain.[13]

The PSC organised disruptions of a performance by the Israel Philharmonic at the Royal Albert Hall in February 2011. BBC Radio 3, which was broadcasting the concert live, was forced to suspend the broadcast several times due to the protesters' shouting and heckling.[14]

On 28 May 2012, when Israel's Habima theatre company performed at the London Shakespeare's Globe Theatre, the PSC and other BDS groups organised a protest outside the building. On 29 May 2012, BBC Radio 4 reported that Habima was "being criticised for performing to Jewish audiences in the Occupied Territories." A PSC press release corrected the report, saying that it was criticising Habima "for performing in illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank." After six months of pressure by PSC, the BBC Trust upheld the PSC's complaint.[15]

The PSC waged a two-year campaign to block an EU trade agreement, the ACAA, that recognised Israeli pharmaceutical standards as equal to those in Europe. The agreement was ultimately passed in October 2012.[16]

In November 2012, the PSC uploaded a 69-minute film to YouTube entitled The Case for Cultural & Academic Boycott of Israel, introduced by Ken Loach.[17]

PSC has supported the BDS campaign against the French company Veolia. Veolia has been criticised by the BDS movement because of its activities in Palestine and Israel. The allegations made included providing infrastructure and services to illegal settlements and racist recruitment policies.[18]

The PSC led a campaign to block the Israeli government's tourism bureau from advertising in British newspapers, its argument being that Israel was misrepresenting Palestinian territories as its own.[19]

Tony Greenstein, one of the founders of PSC, has vocally criticized antisemitism within the movement. In particular, he complained about problems of anti-semitism from Gilad Atzmon's supporters.[6]

An activist with PSC for 10 years, Gary Spedding, wrote an op-ed about PSC's problem with anti-semitism. He said that on social media conversations often crossed the line into anti-Jewish conspiracy theories, anti-Semitic tropes, and vilified Jews who identify with Zionism. He also said activists try to hide their intentions by playing semantics and replacing the word "Jew" with "Zionist". [29]

David Collier attended PSC events and compiled a 79-page dossier on the group. He found hundreds of connections between PSC and anti-semites, and found that Jew-hatred was consistently present. He said that activists regularly cross the line from legitimate criticism of Israel into anti-semitic tropes. He claims that the PSC only plays lip service to fighting racism within their ranks.[7]

Hugh Lanning, the chair of PSC was barred from entering Israel. The Israeli embassy in the UK said he was banned in part due to his connections with Hamas a group that the EU has declared a terrorist organization. The article in the Jewish News, shows a photo of Lanning standing on a stage along with Ismail Haniyeh, one of Hamas's senior political leaders.[30]

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Palestine Solidarity Campaign - Wikipedia


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