Xi Jinping reinforces party control in rare Tibet visit


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Summary

Party control

Xi’s two-day Lhasa visit marked 60 years of the Tibet Autonomous Region and reinforced Communist Party dominance.

Hydropower push

Xi pressed progress on a $167 billion plateau dam, pitched for jobs and emissions goals.

Regional context

The trip coincided with Wang Yi’s India visit and Beijing’s insistence on approving the next Dalai Lama. Reports note tighter controls on language, religion, schooling and policing.


Full story

Chinese President Xi Jinping made a rare trip to Tibet this week, using public events and meetings to press for tighter Communist Party control and closer alignment with party policy across the Himalayan region that’s of great economic and strategic importance to Beijing. State media said Xi arrived in Lhasa on Wednesday and was greeted by about 20,000 officials and residents.

His two-day program coincided with ceremonies marking 60 years since China created the Tibet Autonomous Region in 1965.

During the visit, Xinhua reported that Xi told local officials to expand Mandarin instruction, bring Tibetan Buddhism into closer conformity with socialist principles, and build a stronger sense of national identity under party leadership. He said officials must first ensure political order, ethnic unity and religious calm to manage and develop the region.

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What message did top leaders deliver?

At events staged against the Potala Palace, senior leaders emphasized that Tibet’s development depends on Communist Party leadership. Wang Huning, an official overseeing ethnic affairs, told attendees that “all attempts to split the motherland and undermine the stability of Tibet are doomed to fail.”

Xinhua also said Xi urged progress on a $167 billion hydropower project on the Tibetan plateau that began last month, presented as a driver of jobs, business activity and emissions goals.

How does Tibet fit China’s broader strategy?

Tibet is central to China’s regional and domestic strategy, where military and spiritual fronts overlap.

The region borders India, a rival power that clashed with Chinese troops in 2020, and serves as the source of rivers that sustain more than a billion people downstream. Xi’s trip came as his foreign minister visited New Delhi, highlighting a mix of military pressure and diplomatic outreach.

At the same time, Beijing is trying to control Tibet’s religious future. The Dalai Lama, the spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism who lives in exile in India, has rejected China’s claim that it must approve his successor, insisting a committee in India will make that choice.

What has changed under Xi?

Since 2012, Xi has advanced a harder line on integrating ethnic minorities. In Tibet, authorities have tightened controls on religion, language and schooling, expanded state-run boarding programs that teach mainly in Mandarin and built dense policing networks, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Robert Barnett of the University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies told the Journal that Xi’s repeated focus on political education suggests concern that loyalty has not taken root despite decades of Chinese rule. He said the “fear of hidden disloyalty” may explain the push for Mandarin instruction and party history study.

Chinese officials reject accusations of cultural suppression, telling state media that party policies have raised living standards while preserving Tibetan identity.

Officials said the region now offers 15 years of free schooling from kindergarten through senior high, while average life expectancy has climbed to 72.5 years — more than double the figure from 1951.

Champa Gyatso, a monk at Sakya Monastery, said services have noticeably improved for residents.

“Our access to elderly care, medical services and housing has been truly ensured,” he told state media. Xi last visited Tibet in 2021 for the 70th anniversary of Beijing’s takeover. Xinhua framed this week’s stop as proof of the party center’s close attention to the region.

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Why this story matters

Chinese President Xi Jinping’s visit to Tibet highlights the government’s focus on tightening party control, promoting Mandarin language policies and advancing development projects in a region with economic, strategic and cultural significance to China.

Strategic development

Xi’s visit coincided with promotion of a major hydropower project and highlighted Tibet’s importance for China’s economic growth, environmental goals and border security, especially given its proximity to India and regional water resources.

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Behind the numbers

Official sources state that Tibet's economy grew to 277 billion yuan ($39-49 billion) in 2024 and its road network doubled to 120,000 km since 2012. Human rights groups estimate about one million Tibetan children are in state-run boarding schools.

Community reaction

Reports indicate that exiled Tibetans protested against China's policies during Xi's visit, especially in India, while Chinese state media highlighted orchestrated celebrations and welcomes by selected groups in Lhasa.

Global impact

Tibet's strategic location along the border with India and river systems affects regional security and transboundary water issues, with neighboring countries expressing concern over China's major hydropower projects in the region.

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Bias comparison

  • Media outlets on the left frame Xi Jinping’s visit to Tibet as emblematic of “contested rule” and ongoing cultural repression, emphasizing politically charged terms like “showcase control” and highlighting forced assimilation through Mandarin-language boarding schools—depicted as human rights violations.
  • Not enough unique coverage from media outlets in the center to provide a bias comparison.
  • Media outlets on the right portray the visit as a reaffirmation of China’s “autonomous region” status and socioeconomic progress, employing pragmatic language such as “needs to maintain its power” and focusing on stability, development, and geopolitical strategy, including China-India border diplomacy.

Media landscape

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Key points from the Left

  • Chinese President Xi Jinping arrived in Lhasa to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the founding of Xizang Autonomous Region.
  • Xi Jinping is accompanied by Wang Huning and Cai Qi as part of the central delegation.
  • During his visit, Xi urged the building of a "modern socialist" Tibet that is "united, prosperous, civilized, harmonious and beautiful."
  • Xi received a warm welcome from various ethnic groups who waved flowers and danced "to joyful rhythms," according to the Xinhua News Agency.

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Key points from the Right

  • Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Lhasa, Tibet, on Wednesday to observe the 60th anniversary of the founding of the Tibet Autonomous Region by Beijing, as reported by state media.
  • The Tibet Autonomous Region was established by China’s ruling Communist Party in 1965, making it the country's fifth autonomous region.
  • International human rights groups describe China's rule in Tibet as "oppressive," a claim that Beijing rejects.
  • Xi's visit marks his second ever as China’s leader, following his last visit in July 2021 when he urged residents to "follow the party."

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