The good thing is that the Tibetan Parliament acts as both opposition and ruling party. Members are all elected on a regional basis, and they mostly act as individuals, so there is no opposition party per se. Our democracy is a party-less democracy. It's based on a Buddhist notion and the practical idea that if there is a political party in a country, the political party will sometimes act more for its party interests than for national or common interests.
That's why ours is a party-less democracy. We all act in the national interest, rather than for party interests. That's the idea. It's the Buddhist way of achieving consensus in all decisions, which is very difficult. That's the basis on which we are moving forward. So far it's working. Democracy without borders is working.
Don't give ideas to members of the Tibetan Parliament to have an opposition. If there is true opposition in the government, we in the executive will be on the receiving end.