TAWANG (India) - BUDDHIST monks and nuns spruced up their monasteries and hung up welcome banners on Friday in anticipation of the Dalai Lama's contentious visit to this remote Indian town near the Tibetan frontier.
China has strongly protested the Dalai Lama's visit starting Sunday to the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh, which lies at the heart of a long-running border dispute between the two Asian powers.
The visit also brings the Tibetan spiritual leader to the edge of his Himalayan homeland, which China controls. Regardless of the political tensions, the residents of Tawang see the visit as a rare opportunity to host the Buddhist leader.
Buddhist monks painted roofs Friday while nuns scrubbed the floors of monasteries. Young monks climbed scaffolding to hang up multicolored banners with pictures of the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, who last visited in 2003.
'The air is filled with a religious and festive fervor,' Lama Lopon, one of the head priests of the main Tawang Monastery, told The Associated Press.
The Dalai Lama is scheduled to lead a three-day prayer session in Tawang for 20,000 followers from the region and the neighboring Himalayan countries of Bhutan and Nepal. -- AP