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October 17, 2007 Wednesday Shawwal 4, 1428





Bush hosts Dalai Lama despite China’s warning


WASHINGTON, Oct 16: President George Bush hosted the Dalai Lama on Tuesday despite China’s warning that U.S. plans to honour the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader could damage relations between Beijing and Washington.

The White House talks were held on the eve of a congressional award ceremony for the Dalai Lama, but the Bush administration took pains to keep the encounter with the president low-key in an apparent bid to placate China.

“We in no way want to stir the pot and make China feel that we are poking a stick in their eye, to a country that we have ... a good relationship on a variety of issues,” White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said.

Beijing has bitterly denounced plans for the Dalai Lama, who has lived in exile in India since staging a failed uprising against Chinese rule in 1959, to receive the Congressional Gold Medal on Wednesday.

Mr Bush was scheduled to attend the ceremony on Capitol Hill, marking the first time a sitting U.S. president will appear in public with the Dalai Lama.

“We are furious,” Tibet’s Communist Party boss, Zhang Qingli, told reporters in China. “If the Dalai Lama can receive such an award, there must be no justice or good people in the world.”

The White House denied that Bush’s private meeting with the Dalai Lama, the president’s fourth since taking office, was meddling in China’s internal affairs.

But Perino said: “We understand that the Chinese have very strong feelings about this.”

PLAYING DOWN THE SYMBOLISM: Trying to play down the symbolism of the talks, Mr Bush met the Dalai Lama in the White House residence instead of the Oval Office where he normally welcomes visiting world leaders.

White House staff -- who had refused even to say when the meeting would take place -- afterward said it lasted about half an hour but would give no further details. Reporters were not allowed to glimpse the two together, and no photographs were released.Asked why Mr Bush was going ahead with the talks, White House spokesman Tony Fratto said: “He made it clear in his communications with the Chinese ... that when the Dalai Lama was in town for the congressional ceremony that they would meet. So there’s no reason not to.”

China pulled out of a meeting this week at which world powers were to discuss Iran, in apparent protest at Congress’s plan to honour the Dalai Lama with its highest civilian award.

Chinese Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said China had expressed “resolute opposition” to the U.S. award. “China has solemnly demanded the United States cancel the above-mentioned and extremely wrongful arrangement,” Yang told reporters.

Foreign ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said if the decision to honour the Dalai Lama was not reversed it would have an “extremely serious impact” on bilateral relations.China pulled out of the meeting on Iran for “technical reasons”, he told a news conference.—Reuters






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