http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahome/indianews/article-4967868/China-India-Doklam-standoff.html
Some vague excuses have been given for not doing so. In this morose context, an incident took place in Dharamsala, the hometown of the Dalai Lama in Himachal Pradesh.
On October 1 (incidentally, the Chinese National Day), a Chinese woman, a long-term guest in India, holding a US passport, physically assaulted a Tibetan woman 'hurling verbal abuses and also vandalising a part of the photo exhibition set up by our NGO near the Dalai Lama's temple, in McLeod Ganj,' according to the police complaint.
Physical assault
A Dharamsala-based Tibetan NGO called Gu-Chu-Sum, started by former Tibetan political prisoners, had organised a photo exhibition to mark the 30th anniversary of the 1987 Tibetan unrest.
According the complaint: 'While hundreds of foreigners, tourists and local people visited the exhibition, this Chinese woman, Ms Zhu Wenqi, 44, objected to the photo exhibition saying these photos insult China.'
She attacked Namgyal Dolkar Lhagyari, a member of the Tibetan Parliament and Gu-Chu-Sum president, when the latter tried to pacify her; the correspondent of Voice of America who was filming the scene, was hit in the face by Zhu.
Though there is no proof that the Chinese lady is linked to the regime in Beijing, the attack however raises serious issues.