China Pandas to Public Opinion in Britain

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - JUNE 27:

He called us his “dear friends from the press” and said he wished “to announce a piece of good news.” Chinese premier Wen Jiabao, on his first trip to London since David Cameron entered Downing Street, appeared in the most cordial of spirits at a June 27 press conference with Britain’s Prime Minister. And Wen’s news, or at least the context in which he placed it and the way the translator rendered it, was indeed attention-grabbing. During talks that morning with Cameron, said Wen, China had agreed “to donate a pair of giant pandas to Edinburgh Zoo. In addition we also exchanged views on human rights.”

If Wen hoped the pandas would deflect discussion from China’s hounding of dissidents and crackdown on stirrings of a “jasmine revolution,” he might at least have considered giving Britain a second pair of bears. The gift of 8-year-old pandas Tian Tian and Yang Guang to a Scottish zoo had been trumpeted as long ago as January, during a London visit by his Vice Premier Li Keqiang. On the other hand, Wen must know that with Europeans increasingly dependent on Chinese investment in the region’s sovereign debt market and increasingly avid to find ways to hitch their sluggish economies to Chinese growth, European leaders prepared to publicly excoriate his government for human rights abuses are rarer than pandas.

The headline announcement from Wen’s British visit is a £1.4 billion trade deal that will see the U.K. shipping to China far more animals than it gains in return, with a big order for British pigs in place and the lifting of a Chinese ban on British poultry imports. Cameron did find diplomatic turns of phrase to express the British view that China needs to match its economic development with the development of civil society and its attendant freedoms and rights. Even that mild point elicited from Wen a reprimand about Western “finger-pointing,” albeit buried in an answer of such length and then laboriously translated that Cameron may not have noticed. It was left to one of the big beasts of British journalism, Sky News political editor Adam Boulton, to raise China’s record more forcefully, asking Wen if his country needed to make progress on human rights and quizzing Cameron about whether Britain risked compromising its principles in doing business with China. ”We do believe the best guarantor of prosperity and stability is for economic and political progress to go in step together,” said Cameron. Wen suggested Boulton hadn’t taken enough buses in China to make informed criticisms. Boulton later took to Twitter to give this bemused response:

Still recovering from clash with Chinese PM Wen, says I haven’t traveled much in #China – pity my last visa app was turned down!

Subscribe to Catherine Mayer on Facebook
Related Topics: David Cameron, pandas, Wen Jiabao, Business, China, Democracy, Human rights, U.K.
  • Latest on Global Spin

    Pablo Martinez Monsivais / AP

    Obama’s Afghanistan Problem: Neither Karzai Nor the Taliban Like the ‘Reconciliation’ Script

    President Barack Obama huddled with President Hamid Karzai in Chicago on Sunday, urging Afghanistan’s leader to accelerate negotiations with the Taliban over a political solution to the longest war in America’s history. But the prospect for Karzai negotiating successfully with the insurgents is clouded by a question raised by Josef Stalin, on the eve of World War II, in response to the suggestion that he offer concessions to the Pope: “How many divisions does he have?” The Taliban now ask the same question about Karzai. And should the Afghan leader also ask himself the question, he might reach a similarly dispiriting conclusion. Karzai’s independent power base is minimal, as is his ability to influence the outcome of his country’s civil war absent direct U.S. involvement. And that gives neither Karzai nor the Taliban much incentive to cut a deal with the other.

    JOSEPH EID/AFP/GettyImages

    Must-Reads from Around the World, May 21, 2012

    Spillover - Lebanon’s Daily Star reports on escalating violence inside the country after soldiers shot dead a prominent anti-Bashar al-Assad Muslim preacher Sunday. “The gravity of the incident… prompted leaders on both sides of the political divide to call for calm and restraint to prevent the country from sliding into sectarian strife as a result of a spillover of the 15-month-old uprising in neighboring Syria,” it says.

    UPPA / ZUMAPRESS

    A Royal Party: Britain Celebrates 60 Years of Queen Elizabeth II

    From parades to concerts, and even tea with commoners, 86 year-old Queen Elizabeth II is traversing the United Kingdom to commemorate her Diamond Jubilee.

blog comments powered by Disqus