Since the beginning of the 1990s educational, cultural
and health work in Tibet has been further improved, and
this has further promoted the people's right to education,
culture and health protection.
The Chinese Government has adopted many preferential policies
to promote education in Tibet. Boarding schools have been
introduced in rural and pastoral areas, where Tibetan primary
and middle school students enjoy free food, clothing and
accommodation. Stipend and scholarship systems have been
put in place step by step in primary and middle schools
above the town level. The principle of "giving priority
to people of local ethnic groups" has been adopted
by all schools while recruiting students in Tibet, and a
flexible enrollment method adopted in dealing with examinees
of Tibetan and other ethnic minorities origin, whereby "the
pass marks for admission are appropriately lowered and students
are chosen on the basis of their test results."
Currently, a fairly complete modern education system is
being operated in the Tibet Autonomous Region, and education
is being spread to wider areas in the Region. According
to 1997 statistics, 4,251 regular and village-run primary
schools had been established in Tibet, with a total enrollment
of 300,453 students. In 1997, 78.2 percent of school-age
children were in school, a 32.6 percentage point increase
over 1991. There are 90 secondary schools in Tibet, with
17,155 more students enrolled than in 1991. There are also
four institutions of higher learning and 16 special secondary
schools in Tibet. The illiteracy rate among the young and
middle-aged has dropped by 41 percentage points as compared
with the figure before the peaceful liberation of Tibet.
From 1991 to 1997 a total of 580,000 sq m of new schools
were built in Tibet, including 27 secondary schools, 278
regular township primary schools and 1,359 village-run primary
schools, and a total of over 300,000 sq m of old school
buildings renovated. In recent years the government has
been investing more and more in education in Tibet. In 1997
such investment accounted for 18 percent equally of the
budgeted expenditure and budgeted capital construction investment.
These facts are in strong contrast to the situation in Tibet
before peaceful liberation, when only a small number of
monk officials and children of the nobility had the privilege
of studying and less than two percent of the school-age
children went to school; education was denied to the masses
of serfs and slaves.
Since the mid-1980s, to make it easier for secondary school
students from Tibet to study in inland China the Central
Government has appropriated special funds to set up Tibetan
junior middle-school classes in some of the provinces and
municipalities in the hinterland and one Tibetan middle
school each in the cities of Beijing, Tianjin and Chengdu.
Transportation, food and board, clothing and medical care
expenses of the Tibetan students in those schools are covered
by the government. The Central Government has allocated
a special capital construction fund totalling 73 million
yuan and relevant provinces and municipalities have appropriated
necessary funds amounting to well over 100 million yuan
for running those Tibetan classes and schools in the hinterland.
In addition, the Central Government has appropriated an
annual six million yuan and relevant provinces and municipalities
have set aside a special fund from their budgets to cover
the study and living expenses of the Tibetan students in
inland regions. From 1985 to 1997 a total of 18,000 Tibetan
students had studied in all these Tibetan classes and schools,
of whom more than 5,000 have graduated from special secondary
schools, colleges and universities and returned to Tibet
to take part in the development of the Region. At present,
there are 13,000 Tibetan students studying in more than
100 schools in 26 inland provinces and municipalities.
The essence of traditional Tibetan culture is a component
part of Chinese national culture and the government has
always attached great importance to protecting and developing
it and helping it flourish.
With its distinctive ethnic characteristics Tibetological
research, which plays an important role in inheriting and
developing the essence of traditional Tibetan culture, has
received attention and support from the state. Currently,
there are over 50 Tibetan studies institutes all over the
country, with over 2,000 people engaged in such research
and related auxiliary work. The state has set up the Chinese
Center for Tibetan Studies in the nation's capital Beijing,
and there are a dozen Tibetan studies institutes in Tibet
itself, which have completed over 100 significant research
projects. In recent years Tibetan studies institutes in
China have held more than 60 seminars, single- or multi-disciplinary,
on Tibetan history, language, religion, ethnology, philosophy,
literature, art, education, calendar and traditional medicine.
More than 300 significant projects have been completed and
more than 400 books on Tibetan studies have been published
or are about to be published. Books such as A General History
of Tibet and Mirror of Tibetan History, written by scholars
belonging to the Tibetan ethnic group, have received praise
from home and abroad.
The Chinese Government attaches great importance to learning,
using and developing the Tibetan language in the Tibet Autonomous
Region and has taken concrete measures to guarantee the
freedom of the Tibetan people to use and develop both the
spoken and written Tibetan language, which is a main course
of study at all schools in Tibet as well as in special Tibetan
classes and schools in other parts of the country. Tibetan
students are required to read and write the Tibetan language
proficiently upon graduation from middle schools. Tibet
has finished the editing and translation of 500 kinds of
primary and middle school teaching materials for the compulsory
education stage. The editing, translating into Tibetan and
publishing of a catalogue of technical materials has started,
as has the work on the collection and collation of technical
materials in the Tibetan language. In order to promote the
normalization, standardization and modernization of information
processing in Tibetan, the Region has been working on drawing
up international standards for Tibetan character coding
using information technology since 1994, which has received
strong support from related departments of the state. The
research project was approved at the conference of international
standards verification for multi-language coding held in
Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1996. This has laid a good foundation
for Tibetan-language access to modern information processing
and network exchange. In 1995 a committee for the standardization
of Tibetan terminology was set up to standardize the Tibetan
language and normalize social terms.
Great importance has been continuously attached to traditional
Tibetan medicine and pharmacology. There are 14 Tibetan
medicine institutions in the Region, and Tibetan medicine
is available in over 60 hospitals at the county level. At
present, Tibetan medicine establishments at all levels throughout
Tibet give over 500,000 out-patient consultations annually.
A total of 100,000 kg in over 350 varieties of finished
Tibetan pharmaceuticals is produced each year. Some one
dozen valuable Tibetan herbs have won national gold or silver
medals or prizes at international conferences on traditional
medicine.
The work to systematically investigate, collect, record,
collate, study, compile and publish the traditional cultural
heritage of Tibet on a large scale is continuing apace.
With over 800,000 words and some 300 pictures, the Chinese
Drama: Tibetan Volume was published in December, 1993. The
1.37-million-word Collections of Chinese Folk Songs: Tibetan
Volume was published in 1995. A 10-volume collection of
Tibetan folk and religious arts is to be published one volume
at a time. The popular "Life of King Gesar," the
oral epic of the Tibetan people handed down for generations
by ballad singers, has been included in the Region's key
research projects, with a special institute founded to take
charge of collecting more than 5,000 cassettes and several
hundred video tapes dealing with the epic. In addition,
over 40 million words have been collated, and more than
1,000 research papers and over 30 books on the "Life
of King Gesar" have been published. This long-scattered
oral literature is becoming a systematic, monumental literary
work for the first time. Many Tibetan scholars and people
in Tibetan religious circles have acclaimed it as "realizing
the ardent wish of the Tibetan people of all generations."
The Tibetan Ancient Books Publishing House was set up in
the Region with state funds to take charge of collecting,
editing and publishing Tibetan ancient books. A large number
of Tibetan ancient books, inscribed wooden slips and inscriptions
on bronzes and stone tablets -- including the only existing
copy of the Dewu's History of Buddhism (about the history
of the Tibetan people), Selected Tibetan Laws and Regulations
of All Periods, Selected Books and Records on Tibetan Handicrafts,
Selected Works on Medicine, and Selected Tibetan Historical
Relics, as well as others, have been put under state protection.
Beginning in the early 1990s, the general survey of cultural
relics in the Tibet Autonomous Region is almost finished,
with cultural relics found in 1,768 places. Large numbers
of rare cultural relics have been put under full protection.
Since the 1960s the State Council has put 18 key historical
sites in Tibet under state protection and determined 67
key historical sites under regional protection. The famous
Potala Palace was inscribed on the World Heritage List by
UNESCO in 1994. The Tibet Autonomous Region Archives is
one of the best establishments for keeping local archives
in China. The Tibetan Museum, funded by the state to the
tune of more than 90 million yuan and with a total floor
space of 22,500 sq m, was opened in October 1997.
The people of the Tibet Autonomous Region have full rights
to create and enjoy culture. There are 35 multi-purpose
people's art and cultural centers and more than 380 rural
cultural centers and clubs. A film projection and releasing
network covers both urban and rural areas, including 650
local units, giving free film shows to people in agricultural
and pastoral areas. In 1996 a total of 25 films in over
500 copies were dubbed in Tibetan. Since the beginning of
the 1990s a total of more than 630 films in upwards of 8,500
copies have been dubbed in Tibetan. Meanwhile, Tibet has
four book and audio-visual publishing houses, among them
the Tibetan People's Publishing House has published 76.94
million copies of books of 6,589 titles. There are 23 Tibetan-language
newspapers and magazines in public circulation. By 1996
Tibet had two radio stations, two TV stations, 35 radio
broadcasting, relaying and transmitting stations, 240 television
transponder stations and over 700 ground satellite receiving
stations. The Tibet Autonomous Region Library, set up at
a cost of nearly 100 million yuan, was opened in June 1996.
It has 590,000 books, including more than 100,000 well-collated
and well-preserved Tibetan ancient books.
The Tibetan people enjoy a cultural life which is becoming
more and more prosperous and full of Tibetan characteristics.
Now Tibet boasts a contingent of more than 10,000 literary
and art workers, with Tibetans as the mainstay, 10 professional
art and dance ensembles, 15 small professional performance
teams, and over 160 amateur art ensembles and Tibetan opera
troupes. People in rural areas can often enjoy free performances
given by these professional troupes. In addition, there
are another 11 special folk art education and study institutes
and literature and art organizations. In 1996 professional
Tibetan literature and art works and performances won one
international prize and 10 national prizes. During major
traditional Tibetan festivals and celebrations, such as
the Tibetan New Year, the Sholton Festival, the Great Butter
Festival and the Wangkor Festival, varied and colorful folk
song and dance performances can be seen all over Tibet.
Since the early 1990s more than 30 Tibetan song and dance
troupes, art ensembles and academic delegations have visited,
given performances, engaged in academic exchanges, and held
exhibitions on Tibetan historical relics, books, arts, costume
and handicrafts in more than 30 countries and regions, including
the United States, Germany, France, England, Italy and Austria.
The Central Government and Tibetan governments at all levels
are greatly concerned about the health of the Tibetan people.
After many years of effort, a basic medical and public health
network now covers the whole of the Tibet Autonomous Region.
By the end of 1997 Tibet had 1,324 medical and health establishments,
127 more than in 1991; 6,246 hospital beds, 1,169 beds more
than in 1991, averaging some 2.5 beds per 1,000 people;
10,929 medical and health personnel, 1,189 more than in
1991; 1.84 doctors and 0.7 nurse per 1,000 people; and 4,402
rural medical and health personnel, a 24.46 percent increase.
Old Tibet, under the feudal serfdom, had only three officially
operated, small traditional Tibetan medical establishments,
with only crude medical equipment, and a few private clinics,
employing fewer than 100 medical practitioners. Even including
folk doctors of traditional Tibetan medicine, the number
totalled only about 400.
In Tibet a preferential medical policy is being carried
out. Medical treatment is free in farming and pastoral areas,
and is financed jointly by personal medical insurance and
the state in cities and towns. From 1992 to 1997 the Central
Government and governments at different levels in Tibet
disbursed 964.61 million yuan in expenditures for public
medical services.
Much attention has also been devoted to the medical and
health care of women and children in Tibet. By the end of
1996 a total of 34 maternity and child care centers and
eight baby-friendly hospitals had been set up. In addition,
108 hospitals at and above the county level now have departments
of gynecology and obstetrics, and 110 key townships have
maternity and child care departments which have monitored
the development of more than 250,000 children and given
general surveys and treatments of common and frequently-occurring
diseases among them. Since 1986 about 85 percent of the
children in Tibet have received BCG vaccine inoculations
or drugs and inoculations against poliomyelitis, pertussis,
diphtheria, tetanus and measles. Now 51.25 percent of children
in the Region below the age of seven benefit from the local
health care system specially for children. Besides, modern
delivery methods are available for 50.8 percent of child-bearing
women in Tibet, and the rate reaches 100 percent in Lhasa.
In the Region's counties where children's health projects
have been carried out, the infant mortality rate has decreased
from 91.8 per thousand in 1989 to 55.21 per thousand now.
The sanitation and health conditions of today's Tibet and
those of the old Tibet cannot be mentioned in the same breath.
Smallpox was eradicated early in the 1960s, and some other
dangerous infectious and endemic diseases have also been
effectively controlled or wiped out. In 1996 the overall
incidence of and the mortality resulting from 14 infectious
diseases, such as typhoid fever, hepatitis, epidemic encephalitis
and influenza, dropped by 45.52 and 67.16 percent, respectively,
compared with the 1991 figures. By 1995 poliomyelitis had
been totally eliminated. The government of the Tibet Autonomous
Region is determined to keep in step with the other areas
of China and stamp out diseases caused by iodine deficiency
by the year 2000. In the old Tibet deadly infectious diseases
such as smallpox and the plague were endemic. It is recorded
that during the 150 years before Tibet was peacefully liberated
there were four pandemic outbreaks of smallpox, one of which,
in 1925, killed 7,000 people in the Lhasa area alone. Outbreaks
of typhoid fever in 1934 and 1937 carried off a total of
some 5,000 people in Lhasa.
The steady improvement of health care and living standards
has raised the average life expectancy of Tibetans from
36 years in the old Tibet to the present 65 years. At the
same time, the population of Tibet has increased rapidly
and the protracted stagnation of population growth in the
old days has changed completely. According to a thoroughgoing
census carried out in Tibet during the period 1734-1736
by the Central Government of the Qing Dynasty, the population
at that time was 941,200. About two hundred years later,
in 1953, the local government of Tibet declared its population
to be one million. That is to say, the population of Tibet
was almost at a standstill for some two hundred years, only
slightly rising by 58,000 people. But in the 40 years from
1953 to 1993, after Tibet was peacefully liberated, the
population grew from one million to well over 2.3 million,
of which the population of Tibetans increased by 1.16 million,
or a more than two-fold increase in 40 years. By the end
of 1996 the population of Tibet had reached 2.44 million,
95 percent of whom were Tibetans. This lays bare the lie
that "The population of Tibet is decreasing,"
refutes the bluster about "Tibetans suffering from
genocide" emanating from the Dalai Lama and some Western
sources, and illuminates, from one aspect, the human rights
situations in the new and old Tibet.