BONN, June 19 (Reuter) - The Dalai Lama asked German parliamentarians on Monday to urge the government to support his efforts to negotiate with China over autonomy for Tibet. Parliament's foreign affairs committee was receiving Tibet's spiritual lea der for the first time -- the latest sign that Bonn is increasingly prepared to give him a public hearing despite Chinese objections. Beijing sees the Dalai Lama as the leader of a separatist movement and pro tested when Klaus Kinkel in May became the first German foreign minister to receive him. The winner of the Nobel Peace prize, who heads a Tibetan government-in-exile from India, told the deputies his chief concern was Beijing's settlement policy, which had made native Tibetans a minority in their own land. He also cited what he sees as China's wanton attack on Tibet's culture by pillaging and destroying the vast majority of its Buddhist monasteries. Kinkel told the Dalai Lama in May that Bonn believed China should start di scussions aiming for "an autonomy i
n which Tibet can combine its status as part of the Chinese state with ethnic, cultural and religious independence. ". He said Bonn would continue to press China to respect human rights in Tibet and grant it religious and cultural autonomy.