Manila Bulletin

Pomp and protests as Britain woos China’s Xi

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London (AFP) – Chinese President Xi Jinping enjoyed a glittering state banquet hosted by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace on Tuesday in a visit to Britain focused on business deals and stronger trade ties.

“Mr. President, your visit is a defining moment in this very special year for our bilateral relationsh­ip,” Elizabeth told Xi in a speech, wearing a white banquet dress encrusted with crystals.

“I am confident that it will serve to highlight the sincerity and warmth of our friendship and to strengthen relations between our countries for many years to come,” the monarch added.

Xi recalled British-Chinese cooperatio­n at different points in history before proposing a toast to the royal family, clinking glasses with the queen.

The 170 guests included Prince William and his wife Kate wearing a red gown and tiara, British Prime Minister David Cameron and finance minister George Osborne in white bow ties, Xi’s wife Peng Li yuan and other Chinese dignitarie­s.

Music for the evening included Scottish military pipers and a string orchestra that played Chinese folk songs and tunes from British band The Beatles, and the menu featured venison from the queen’s Scottish estate and fine wines.

Xi rode to the palace in a gilded carriage past thousands of supporters with Chinese flags, and around 200 protesters who booed and waved placards attacking China’s human rights record.

Xi also addressed parliament in a rare honor for visiting dignitarie­s, promising to lift relations between Britain and China to “a new height.”

The British government said the visit will secure trade and investment deals worth more than £30 billion ($45 billion) and lead to the creation of more than 3,900 jobs.

The most keenly awaited deal is an agreement for a new nuclear power plant in Britain in which French business daily Les Echos said China could take a one-third stake together with energy giant EDF.

Serenaded by an official harpist, Chinese leader also took tea with Prince Charles, a friend of the Dalai Lama and who did not attend the state banquet in what was widely interprete­d as a diplomatic snub.

Cameron has been accused by some observers of kowtowing to China in a bid for investment and the visit comes at a particular­ly sensitive time as thousands of jobs are being cut in Britain’s steel sector, partly due to low Chinese steel prices.

The concern was mentioned by main opposition Labor party leader Jeremy Corbyn in a meeting with Xi before the state banquet in which he “raised the issues of human rights and the impact of Chinese imports on the UK steel industry,” according to a Labor spokesman.

Leading Hong Kong pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong, 19, who attended a protest against Xi near Buckingham Palace, told AFP that the prospect of Chinese cash “has blinded the eyes of David Cameron.”

 ??  ?? China’s President Xi Jinping addresses members of parliament and peers in Parliament’s Royal Gallery Tuesday, Oct. 20, in London. Britain and China toasted a “golden age” of relations with a state visit festooned with regal pomp and pageantry but...
China’s President Xi Jinping addresses members of parliament and peers in Parliament’s Royal Gallery Tuesday, Oct. 20, in London. Britain and China toasted a “golden age” of relations with a state visit festooned with regal pomp and pageantry but...

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