"People in Lhasa have returned to their normal lives," he said.
But Qiangba Puncog confirmed that some temples have not re-opened.
"It will take some time for Tibet to recover from the unrest, including aspects of its economic life such as tourism," he said. "We will pull it back on track as soon as possible."
Local police have detained 953 people suspected of participating in the violence in Lhasa, 403 of whom were formally arrested, he said.
Further, 362 people surrendered to law enforcement authorities, and 328 have been released because of the minor nature of their offenses and their willingness to cooperate.
The police put 93 suspects on the wanted list and have already arrested 13 of them.
VIOLENCE IMPAIRS BASIC CONDITIONS FOR DIALOGUE, DOOR REMAINS OPEN
The violence in Tibet stirred up by the Dalai clique is destroying the basis for dialogue with the central government, said Sitar, deputy head of the United Front Work Department of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, at the same press conference.
The activities behind the violence in Tibet and the latest organized disruptions of the Olympic torch relay in Paris and London "greatly hurt the feelings of the Chinese people and damaged the basic conditions and atmosphere for dialogue," Sitar said.
The backers of the Dalai Lama should stop all secessionist activities to create a basic environment for dialogue with the central government, he said. "Our door to conduct dialogue with the Dalai Lama is still open now."
Since 2002, the Dalai Lama's personal envoys have had six meetings with high-ranking CPC officials, Sitar said.
Since 1979, the Dalai Lama has sent more than 20 delegations, which included many of his close relatives, to China.
"The root cause for [there being] no progress after so many contacts is that the Dalai Lama is not sincere: he has proved this by not giving up the 'Tibet independence' stand," Sitar said.
(Xinhua News Agency April 10, 2008)