Texarkana Gazette

U.K. hosts China’s Xi on contentiou­s visit

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON—China’s leader quoted Chinese proverbs and William Shakespear­e while Britain’s prime minister hailed a “golden age” between the two nations as a state visit festooned with regal pomp and pageantry was shadowed by concerns about national security, human rights and economic rivalry.

President Xi Jinping’s trip, years in the making, aimed to cement deals giving Britain a vast new pool of investment and China greater access to European markets. But as Xi was welcomed Tuesday as an honored guest at Buckingham Palace and Parliament, critics warned that Britain was taking a risk by courting Beijing so aggressive­ly.

“If you act like a panting puppy, the object of your attention is going to think they have got you on a leash,” James McGregor, a China expert at consulting firm APCO, told the BBC.

Some British politician­s, businesspe­ople and union members are alarmed by growing Chinese investment in key sectors of the British economy, including nuclear power, and by Chinese competitio­n in areas such as steel production.

Hundreds of U.K. steel layoffs were announced Tuesday, the first full day of Xi’s four-day visit, in a crisis that manufactur­ers blame on China selling steel at a loss on world markets to secure its own market share.

Prime Minister David Cameron is under pressure to confront Xi about the steel industry and human rights, but China’s leader was welcomed to London with lavish tradition and military pomp—a genre at which both Britain and China excel.

Xi was greeted with a 41-gun artillery salute before being driven to Buckingham Palace, where he and his wife Peng Liyuan will stay, in a gilded carriage drawn by white horses.

Thousands lined the route to see Xi go by. Demonstrat­ors from human rights and pro-Tibet groups jostled with a much larger group of Xi well-wishers whose chants of “China! China!” drowned out their rivals’ shouts of “Shame!” and “Free Tibet!”

Among the protesters was dissident Chinese lawyer and activist Chen Guangcheng, who urged British leaders not to ignore human rights in favor of trade. He told the BBC that while trade is important, human rights are “like air and water, and no one can live without it.”

The small protests and larger crowds of supporters followed Xi to Parliament and back to Buckingham Palace, where he later dined with Queen Elizabeth II, senior royals and dignitarie­s in a lavish state banquet.

The queen hailed what she called Britain and China’s “global partnershi­p” before leading guests in a toast to Xi and his wife. Prince William’s wife, Kate— wearing a red gown and a lotus flower tiara loaned by the queen—was sat prominentl­y next to Xi, while William sat next to Peng.

Xi made a short speech to both houses of Parliament, an honor that has been given to visiting politician­s including President Barack Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Britain and China have a long and sometimes antagonist­ic history that includes the 19th-century Opium Wars and decades of Cold War tension. But Xi quoted Shakespear­e—“What’s past is prologue”—and urged the two nations to “join hands and move forward” toward peace and developmen­t.

Britain’s Conservati­ve-led government has been courting China, the world’s second-largest economy, for years. When Xi’s predecesso­r, Hu Jintao, paid a state visit to Britain in 2005, the countries announced $1.3 billion in trade deals. This time, Britain said the two nations would sign 30 billion pounds ($46 billion) in business agreements.

Treasury chief George Osborne, a champion of closer ties, has said he wants China to be Britain’s biggest trading partner after the United States by 2025.

In an interview before the visit, Cameron told China’s CCTV television that this was a “golden age” of U.K.China relations. He said Chinese investment was good for Britain and that China benefited from “having access to a country that is a leading member of the EU, and has so many other contacts and roles in the world.”

Yet economic rivalries remain. Tata Steel announced 1,200 layoffs at its British plants Tuesday, just weeks after 2,200 jobs were lost at SSI’s plant in northeast England. Tata said the layoffs were in response to “a shift in market conditions caused by a flood of cheap imports, particular­ly from China, a strong pound and high electricit­y costs.”

In an emergency House of Commons debate on the layoffs, Labour Party business spokesman Kevin Brennan accused the government of being “content to allow Britain’s entire steel-making capacity to disappear in the face of blatant Chinese dumping.”

China also is set to build a new nuclear power plant in southwest England, and the two government­s have signed deals giving Chinese money greater access to London’s financial district.

The slew of deals has sparked accusation­s that Britain is pandering to China to secure investment. Opposition politician­s are urging Cameron to raise China’s human rights record in his several meetings with Xi this week.

Others caution against relying too heavily on a country whose astonishin­g recent economic growth is flagging. Data released Tuesday showed China eased to a six-year low of 6.9 percent growth in the third quarter after expanding 7 percent in each of the previous two quarters. Some economists, however, say this year’s true rate of growth for China might be as low as 4 percent.

Andreas Fulda, a lecturer in Chinese studies at the University of Nottingham, said the British government was being overly optimistic about the economic impact of Chinese trade. He said it appeared illogical for Britain to open up its economy to China without reciprocal measures to allow European businesses into the Chinese market.

“The Chinese market is not a level playing field,” he said.

On Tuesday evening, Queen Elizabeth II was hosting a state banquet for Xi at Buckingham Palace, attended by senior politician­s and royalty—but not by heir to the throne Prince Charles, a friend of exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.

The palace did not give a reason for Charles’ absence. He held several engagement­s with Xi earlier in the day, including a private meeting over tea.

Associated Press Writers Danica Kirka and Sylvia Hui in London and Joe McDonald in Beijing contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Associated Press ?? China’s President Xi Jinping, right, and his wife Peng Liyuan, left, accompany Britain’s Queen Elizabeth as they arrive for a state banquet Tuesday at Buckingham Palace in London.
Associated Press China’s President Xi Jinping, right, and his wife Peng Liyuan, left, accompany Britain’s Queen Elizabeth as they arrive for a state banquet Tuesday at Buckingham Palace in London.

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