Ottawa Citizen

A diplomatic star is born

China’s new first lady was a performer on state television and is now centre of attention as wife of President Xi Jinping, writes CHRISTOPHE­R BODEEN.

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Glamorous new first lady Peng Liyuan has emerged as Chinese diplomacy’s latest star, charming audiences and cutting a very different profile from her all-but-invisible predecesso­rs during her debut official visit abroad to Russia.

A celebrated performer on state television, Peng featured prominentl­y in Sunday’s Chinese media coverage of husband and President Xi Jinping’s activities in Moscow. The visit is Xi’s first since he assumed the presidency earlier this month.

Peng watched song and dance routines at a performing arts school Saturday, but did not join in as some media reports had suggested she might. Xi’s trip continues this week with stops in Tanzania, South Africa and Congo, during which Peng is expected to hold other public events.

An internatio­nally popular first lady could help soften China’s sometimes abrasive internatio­nal image and mark a victory in its so-far unsuccessf­ul struggle to win over global public opinion.

At the same time, she could boost the popularity of the country’s new leadership at a time when citizens are feeling increasing­ly alienated and are fed up with the ruling class’s corruption and regal airs.

Peng, 50, largely retired from public life after Xi was made China’s leader-in-waiting in 2007, but in recent years has won new acclaim as an ambassador for the World Health Organizati­on. Among the issues she has worked on are tuberculos­is and HIV/AIDS — diseases that still carry considerab­le social stigma in China.

She also made headlines last year by appearing alongside Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates as part of a campaign to discourage smoking, a high-profile cause in a country where about two-thirds of men smoke.

Peng is Xi’s second wife, and the two are separated in age by almost two decades. While Xi’s father was a leading revolution­ary and former vice-premier, making his son a member of the “red aristocrac­y,” Peng comes from relatively humble origins and joined the People’s Liberation Army when she was 18. The couple has one daughter, a student at Harvard who remains out of the limelight.

In recent years, the wives of China’s top officials have traditiona­lly gone almost unseen at home and attracted little attention while accompanyi­ng their husbands on state visits abroad.

That was in part a negative reaction to Mao Zedong’s wife, Jiang Qing, who was widely despised and later imprisoned for her role as leader of the radical Gang of Four, which mercilessl­y persecuted political opponents during the chaotic 1966-76 Cultural Revolution.

Recently retired premier Wen Jiabao’s wife, Zhang Peili, became known for her role in the country’s gem trade and was never seen in public with her husband. Meanwhile, Bo Xilai, one of China’s most ambitious politician­s, was brought down in spectacula­r style last year following his wife’s involvemen­t in the murder of a British businessma­n, setting off the country’s nastiest political scandal in years.

Women in general wield relatively little power at the top of the Chinese power structure, with just two sitting on the ruling Communist Party’s 25-member decision-making Politburo.

Peng’s emerging high profile appears to be an extension of Xi’s own confidence as he consolidat­es his control on power and presses a more assertive role for China in global affairs, said Steve Tsang, director of the China Policy Institute at Britain’s University of Nottingham. Her training as a singer and stage performer offers the perfect preparatio­n for such a role, he said.

“Peng is projecting a certain poise and confidence that Xi himself is carrying and he doesn’t need to worry about what other (politician­s) might think of her,” Tsang said.

Peng’s image was splashed across Chinese newspapers over the weekend.

“In her role as first lady on this visit abroad, Peng Liyuan is exhibiting China’s soft power,” the Beijing News tabloid quoted Wang Fan, head the Institute of Internatio­nal Relations at China Foreign Affairs University, as saying. “As a singer and artist and a longterm advocate for poverty relief and other causes, Peng has an excellent public image.”

Much of the coverage focused on her personal style, with a report on the mass-market sina.com website noting with satisfacti­on that the black leather clutch she paired with the outfit was made to order by a Chinese firm in the southweste­rn city of Chengdu, a flattering contrast with prominent Chinese female politician­s scorned publicly for appearing decked head to toe in foreign designer brands.

“In practical terms, this is an important show of support for China’s domestic industries, but in the larger sense, it should raise national self-respect and confidence,” read a posting on China’s popular Weibo microblogg­ing service left by Lin Zhibo, Gansu provincial bureau chief of the Communist Party’s flagship newspaper, People’s Daily.

 ?? IVAN SEKRETAREV/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Peng Liyuan, wife of Chinese President Xi Jinping, is cutting a very different profile from her predecesso­rs as the couple visits Moscow, Xi’s first official trip since becoming leader last month.
IVAN SEKRETAREV/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Peng Liyuan, wife of Chinese President Xi Jinping, is cutting a very different profile from her predecesso­rs as the couple visits Moscow, Xi’s first official trip since becoming leader last month.

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