Dalai Lama says understands anger over Everest torch
BERLIN (Reuters) - The Dalai Lama says he understands why Tibetan exiles were angry that the Olympic torch reached the top of Mount Everest but had advised them against protesting.
Exiled Tibetan officials and rights group argue that taking the flame up Everest on Thursday is in bad taste and not in keeping with the spirit of the Olympics.
China effectively closed off the region over concerns protesters would try to disrupt the assault on Everest, sitting astride the border of the Chinese region of Tibet and Nepal.
But in Nepal, police said they detained 210 pro-Tibet protesters on Thursday.
"If the times were quiet, I would not get excited about it. But as things are, I understand the protests, of course without supporting them," the Dalai Lama told Germany's Der Spiegel magazine in an interview conducted on May 6 and published on Friday.
The Tibetan spiritual leader is due in Germany next week.
The flame's global relay has been dogged by anti-China protests that Beijing says were orchestrated by the Dalai Lama, who is branded as a separatist by China.
Tensions have been high since China launched a crackdown against protesters in the Tibetan capital Lhasa in March.
The Dalai Lama, who wants greater autonomy for Tibet, told Der Spiegel he had been worried about border clashes between protesters and armed guards and so advised exiles against holding demonstrations. Continued...

















