Beijing: China on Wednesday said it is "open" for talks with Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama to discuss his "personal future" but not any issues related to Tibet.
Reports from Tokyo said the Dalai Lama while speaking at an online press conference hosted by the Tokyo Foreign Correspondents Club on Wednesday said, "I prefer to remain here in India, peacefully," praising the country as a centre of religious harmony.
The 86-year-old Tibetan Buddhist spiritual leader said he has no particular plans to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping and expressed his wish to visit the Himalayan homeland to meet old friends.
He declined to comment on Xi's plans to remain in office for a third five-year term.
"Chinese Communist leaders, they do not understand the variety of different cultures. In reality, too much control will harm people," said the Dalai Lama, who lived in India in-exile ever since he fled Tibet in 1959 following China's takeover of the Himalayan region.
Asked for his reaction to the Dalai Lama's remarks and whether Beijing will permit him to visit China or Tibet, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin told a media briefing here that Beijing is open for dialogue with the Tibetan spiritual leader.
"The Central Government of China's policy on contact and negotiations with the 14th Dalai Lama is consistent and clear, and the door for contact and negotiations remains open," he said.
"I want to stress that the contact and negotiations are only about the personal future of the 14th Dalai Lama, not the so-called 'Tibetan issue'," he said.
What the "Dalai Lama should do is to truly give up the position of splitting the motherland, stop activities that will separate the country, and win the trust of the Central Government and the Chinese people with concrete actions," he said.
He also lashed out at the Tibetan government-in-exile, saying the so-called "Tibetan government-in-exile" is an out-and-out separatist political group and an illegal organisation completely in violation of China's Constitution and laws. It is not recognised by any country in the world".
An official white paper released in May said that any successor to the Dalai Lama should be approved by the Chinese government, ruling out recognition to any heir nominated by him or by his followers.
The Dalai Lama's succession issue was in the limelight, especially in the last few years after the US has stepped up campaign that the right relating to the reincarnation of Dalai Lama's successor should be within the exclusive authority of the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan people.
The Tibetan Policy and Support Act of 2020 (TPSA) passed by the US Congress makes it official United States policy that decisions regarding the reincarnation of the Dalai Lama are exclusively within the authority of the current Dalai Lama, Tibetan Buddhist leaders and the Tibetan people.
China, meanwhile, has tightened its control in Tibet.
Last month, China's ruling Communist Party appointed Wang Junzheng, sanctioned by the US, Britain, the EU and Canada for his alleged role in the human rights violations against Uygur Muslims in Xinjiang, as the head of the party unit in Tibet.
Wang, 58, became China's highest-ranking official to be widely sanctioned over accusations of human rights violations in March, during his tenure as Xinjiang's deputy party secretary and security chief.