![China exiles Lady Gaga from web for meeting Dalai Lama China exiles Lady Gaga from web for meeting Dalai Lama](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/150/1501686/china-exiles-lady-gaga-from-web-for-meeting-d-L-YsxcRy.jpeg)
Asked by a foreign reporter whether the tête-à-tête would create a “bad romance” between Beijing and Lady Gaga, a spokesperson for China’s foreign ministry initially hinted that he was not familiar with the pop star’s Grammy-winning back catalog. “Who?” Hong Lei said when asked for Beijing’s view on the singer’s meeting. China has previously banned artists and groups such as Maroon 5, Bjork and Oasis from performing in the country after they met with the Dalai Lama or spoke out in favour of him or Tibetan independence. Experts suggested the American singer would have gone into her meeting with the spiritual leader with her eyes wide open as to the consequences. Lady Gaga, whose career has survived previous bans in China, is yet to respond to China’s reported ban of her work. During her meeting with the Dalai Lama she said: “We have to cool the system down. It’s about less heat, more cooling, more relaxation but also [being] thoughtful and strategic.” China’s media regulators often issue similar directives when sensitive issues surface, telling news outlets to stop covering stories, use only official reports, and sometimes remove articles from their websites. So in China, she may not be on web ! – back in Feb 2014, US President Barack Obama met the Dalai Lama at the White House despite objections from China, which warned that the meeting would inflict grave damage on Sino-American relations. The two Nobel laureates spent an hour in the White House's Map Room, a step down in prestige from the Oval Office, where the president traditionally meets foreign heads of state. The meeting was closed to reporters. China responded with equal vitriol to Obama's meetings with him, in 2010 and 2011, though it did not follow up with concrete measures that would damage ties. In contrast, Beijing cut off high-level diplomatic ties with the UK for about a year after David Cameron met the Dalai Lama in 2012. "We can only push the west to change its way of thinking if we let them understand that China's power cannot be avoided … and that the west's interests lie in development and maintaining ties with China, not the opposite," a media person in China wrote. Anyway, such actions will not ignite debates of intolerance !! With regards – S. Sampathkumar
28th June 2016.