(14 Feb 2010)
1. Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama leading prayer session
2. Buddhist monks praying
3. Various of the Dalai Lama in prayer
4. Various of monks in prayer ritual
5. Dalai Lama praying
6. Monks praying
7. Dalai Lama in prayer
8. Wideshot of 3 monks
9. Dalai Lama wearing yellow hat of the Gelugpa sect
10. Wideshot of monks
11. Monks praying
12. Various of Dalai Lama chanting
13. SOUNDBITE: (Tibetan) Dalai Lama, Tibetan spiritual leader:
"Tibetans inside Tibet are the real citizens of Tibet. People are grieving in many parts of Tibet and are not celebrating the New Year."
14. Crowd waving Tibetan flags and shouting slogans
STORYLINE:
Tibetans will not celebrate Lunar New Year for a second year in protest of the suffering of people inside Tibet, the Dalai Lama said on Sunday.
Speaking in Dharmsala in India where the Tibetan spiritual leader is exiled, he asked his followers not to lose hope.
He said people in Tibet have shown great courage and sincerity in facing China''s crackdown after uprisings in March 2008.
Tibetans in exile also called off New Year celebrations last year.
The Lunar New Year holiday that began Saturday is the most important of the year in China.
"Tibetans inside Tibet are the real citizens of Tibet. People are grieving in many parts of Tibet and are not celebrating the New Year," the Dalai Lama told more than a thousand Tibetans in exile who dressed in traditional finery and greeted him at the Tsuglakhang temple.
The Dalai Lama led a prayer session, attended by senior Buddhist monks and Tibetan parliamentarians.
Tibetans beat drums and cymbals during the two-hour ceremony on the terrace of the temple.
A group of young Tibetans, led by Tenzin Tsundue, a writer and political activist, waved Tibetan flags outside the temple and shouted "Free Tibet."
The Dalai Lama is scheduled to meet US President Barack Obama in Washington next Thursday.
China has urged Washington to cancel the meeting and says it could damage US-China relations.
China accuses the Dalai Lama of pushing to free Tibet from Chinese rule, which he denies.
He has been living in the northern Indian town of Dharmsala since he fled Tibet 50 years ago when Chinese troops marched in.
China maintains that Tibet has been part of its territory for centuries, but many Tibetans say the region was functionally independent for much of its history.
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