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China's Xi Jinping meets Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi: Xinhua
By Benjamin HAAS
Beijing (AFP) June 11, 2015


China's Panchen Lama meets Xi, calls for 'national unity'
Beijing (AFP) June 11, 2015 - A man Beijing has named as one of the most senior figures in Tibetan Buddhism met with Chinese President Xi Jinping, state media said Thursday, as Communist authorities seek to win support for their policies in the region.

Gyaincain Norbu, who China appointed as its choice of 11th Panchen Lama, was asked by Xi to carry on the "patriotic tradition" of Tibetan Buddhism during Wednesday's meeting, the China Daily newspaper said.

Many Tibetans do not recognise Norbu as the Panchen Lama -- the second most revered figure in the Gelug school of Tibetan Buddhism.

Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama's choice for Panchen lama, Gendun Choekyi Nyima, was detained by Chinese authorities in 1995 at the age of six and has not been seen since.

China's Panchen Lama has been labelled by Tibetan groups as a symbol of Beijing's efforts to exert control over local religious practices.

"Panchen Lama promised.... to unswervingly safeguard national unity and ethnic harmony," the China Daily said.

"He also said he would bear in mind President Xi's advice, to learn hard and work vigorously to make his contribution to Tibetan Buddhism and socialist construction," the report added.

China often uses terms such as "patriotic" to mean allegiance to political authorities.

The Dalai Lama is still widely revered by Tibetans in China and the meeting came just a month before his 80th birthday.

The spiritual leader fled to India in 1959 after an aborted uprising against Chinese rule and is accused by Beijing of seeking independence for Tibet.

Xi said he expected the Panchen Lama to grow into "a Tibetan Buddhist leader with great religious acumen, deeply loved by the monks and secular followers," the report said.

China's Panchen Lama -- who is thought to be in his mid-twenties -- has made numerous tightly scripted public appearances since he turned 18, and he made his first trip outside of the Chinese mainland with a visit to Hong Kong in 2012.

The 10th Panchen Lama died in 1989 after a tumultuous relationship with China's communist leaders which saw him lauded and later imprisoned.

Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing on Thursday, state media said, during her closely watched first visit that China hopes will establish a line of communication with the influential opposition leader.

Suu Kyi met Xi at Beijing's Great Hall of the People, according to the official Xinhua News Agency, which did not immediately provide details on what was discussed.

Beijing was a key backer of Myanmar's former military junta while it was under Western sanctions -- most of which have been lifted since 2011 -- and a much-needed international ally for a brutal regime that crushed dissent and kept Suu Kyi under house arrest for more than 15 years.

But China-Myanmar relations have cooled as the country has introduced democratic reforms and opened up economically to the West while in recent months an ethnic insurgency in the Kokang region of Myanmar has spilled over the border into China.

The visit comes as Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy (NLD) party is expected to perform strongly in elections later this year and China looks to develop a rapport with the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize winner.

Suu Kyi came to China at the invitation of the Communist Party, of which Xi is the general secretary.

"China and Myanmar are close, friendly neighbours," Xi said, according to Xinhua.

"China always looks at the China-Myanmar relationship from a strategic and long-term perspective," he added.

"We hope and believe that the Myanmar side will also maintain a consistent stance on China-Myanmar relationship and be committed to advancing friendly ties, no matter how its domestic situation changes."

Xinhua did not immediately report Suu Kyi's remarks.

- Rare visit -

Suu Kyi arrived in Beijing on Wednesday with an NLD delegation and met later in the evening with a senior Communist Party official Wang Jiarui, Xinhua reported late Wednesday.

It is rare for China to invite an opposition leader to visit, given its policy of avoiding involvement in what it calls the internal affairs of other countries.

Still, Suu Kyi's welcome has all the hallmarks of an official visit -- the imposing Great Hall of the People is where Xi regularly welcomes visiting heads of state.

"The Chinese realise they should not keep all their eggs in one basket and they see they need to build bridges," said Willy Lam, a professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

"This policy shift is an improvement and represents a maturity in Beijing's attitude towards relationships with authoritarian regimes," he added.

"They used to just invest and build relationships with the powers that be."

Since launching reforms in 2011, Myanmar President Thein Sein has reached out to the United States and other countries.

But the 69-year-old Suu Kyi is unable to stand for president herself because of a law scripted by the junta forbidding people who have been married to foreigners -- as she was before her British husband's death -- or those who have foreign children from running for president, something she is trying to change.

There is also considerable irony in China welcoming a noted democracy advocate and Nobel Prize winner while Liu Xiaobo, a Chinese Nobel Peace Prize winner, languishes in prison after being sentenced to 11 years in prison in 2009 for circulating a petition calling for democratic reforms.

China's foreign ministry said Wednesday that China hopes the visit will bolster "mutual understanding and trust".

Suu Kyi will also travel to Shanghai and the southwestern province of Yunnan, China's Beijing Youth Daily newspaper reported Thursday. The report did not say where in Yunnan she would go, but part of the province borders Myanmar where the ethnic fighting has occurred.

Suu Kyi became one of the world's most famous political prisoners during her house arrest for much of the 1990s and 2000s because of her outspoken opposition to military rule. She was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991.

But her global image as an upholder of human rights has lost some of its lustre as she has come under criticism for her reluctance to speak out on the plight of Myanmar's unwanted Rohingya Muslims, who are at the centre of a migrant crisis engulfing the region.


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SUPERPOWERS
Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi arrives in China for first visit
Beijing (AFP) June 10, 2015
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi arrived in China Wednesday for a debut visit that will cast an intriguing light on Beijing's attitude towards the democracy champion and Nobel laureate as she bids to take power. Suu Kyi emerged from Beijing's main international airport exit wearing a white top and pink sash and surrounded by police and security, before getting into a black sedan, a ... read more


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