National Democratic Party of Tibet: Difference between revisions
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| ideology = {{Nowrap|[[Cultural conservatism]]<br>[[Constitutional monarchism]]<br>[[Tibetan nationalism]]}} |
| ideology = {{Nowrap|[[Cultural conservatism]]<br>[[Constitutional monarchism]]<br>[[Tibetan nationalism]]}} |
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| position = |
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| religion = [[ |
| religion = [[Tibetan Buddhism]] |
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| colours = [[Blue]], [[red]], [[white]] |
| colours = [[Blue]], [[red]], [[white]] |
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| membership = 5,000 (worldwide) |
| membership = 5,000 (worldwide) |
Revision as of 15:13, 4 December 2023
National Democratic Party of Tibet བོད་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་ཡོངས་མང་གཙོ་ཚོགས་པ། | |
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President | Tsetan Norbu |
Vice President | Karma Yangdup |
Founded | 2 September 1994 |
Headquarters | Dharamsala, India |
Membership | 5,000 (worldwide) |
Ideology | Cultural conservatism Constitutional monarchism Tibetan nationalism |
Religion | Tibetan Buddhism |
Colours | Blue, red, white |
Seats in Exile Parliament | 16 / 43 |
National Democratic Party of Tibet | |||||||||||
Tibetan name | |||||||||||
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Tibetan | བོད་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་ཡོངས་མང་གཙོ་ཚོགས་པ | ||||||||||
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The National Democratic Party of Tibet is a major party in the Tibetan government in exile, officially the Central Tibetan Administration, based in India.[1]
It was founded on 2 September 1994, but the seeds of the party were planted by the 14th Dalai Lama at a meeting of the Tibetan Youth Congress in 1990. Based on that meeting, leaders of the congress began drawing up a constitution. Mr. TT Karma Chophel was elected the first President of the NDPT, and ten other executive members were chosen.[2]
Structure and activities
According to the party, its main aim and objectives are to prepare for the establishment of the political parties in a future Tibet, to promote democracy, to educate the Tibetan people about the significance of political parties, and to create awareness among the people about Tibetan issues.[3]
In 2008, the party held workshops on democracy in Tibetan settlements located in remote parts of India, where the Tibetan community was taught about democracy as a value. In the 5th National Convention, the party passed a bill to support Tibetan political science students in different universities.
This party played an important role in arousing political discussions in exile. The party supported Dr. Lobsang Sangay both during the 2011 and 2016 Tibetan Election for Kalon Tripa, now termed Sikyong (Prime Minister) to head the Central Tibetan Administration. However, in 2016 the party nominated Speaker Penpa Tsering along with Dr. Sangay to provide wider choice to the Tibetan diaspora.
Party leaders
- TT Karma Chophel (1994–1996)
- Kunga Tsering (1996–1997)
- Acharya Yeshi Phuntsok (1997–2000; 2000–2004)
- TT Karma Chophel (2004–2006)
- Chime Youngdung (2006–2012)
- Gelek Jamyang (2012–2016)
- Tsetan Norbu (2016–2019; 2019–2021)
Opposition
In May 2011, Tenzin Rabgyal founded the People's Party of Tibet in an effort to bring plurality to the democratic process for Tibetans.
See also
References
- ^ National Democratic Party of Tibet Archived 2 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Birth of NDP
- ^ Brief History of the National Democratic Party of Tibet, National Democratic Party of Tibet Facebook page, 12 November 2009
External links
- "History and Development of National Democratic Party of Tibet". World Action Tibet. 30 September 2009. Retrieved 17 April 2016.
- National Democratic Party of Tibet on Facebook
- National Democratic Party of Tibet
- Banned political parties in China
- Banned secessionist parties
- Politics of Tibet
- Political parties in Tibet
- Central Tibetan Administration
- Political parties established in 1994
- 1994 establishments in India
- Nationalist parties
- Conservative parties
- Monarchist parties
- 1990s establishments in Himachal Pradesh
- Dharamshala
- Political parties in Himachal Pradesh