"His attitude is: 'I, I, I'," the Dalai Lama said, pointing out that Putin had served as Russian president, then prime minister and then president again.
"That's a bit too much," he told the Welt am Sonntag newspaper. "This is very self-centred."
The Buddhist leader also had more criticism for Russia, now in the worst standoff with the West since the Cold War, than for China, which has ruled Tibet since its 1950 invasion.
"China wants to be part of the global political system and will be ready to accept the international rules in the long run," he said in the interview conducted in English.
"I don't have the impression that this accounts for Russia and President Putin, as well, at the moment.
"We had become accustomed (to the fact) that the Berlin Wall has fallen," he said, alluding to the shattering of the Communist bloc begun 25 years ago.
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