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Top China state-run think-tank warned over ideology: media
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) June 16, 2014


China's Premier Li heads to Britain
Beijing (AFP) June 16, 2014 - China's Premier Li Keqiang left Monday for a three-day visit to Britain, state media reported, in a trip aimed at further warming ties frozen more than a year ago over Tibet.

Li departed Beijing on Monday afternoon, the official news agency Xinhua reported.

In Britain he is expected to have a rare audience with Queen Elizabeth II and hold a joint press conference with Prime Minister David Cameron, whose May 2012 meeting with the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama infuriated Beijing.

In a piece in Britain's Times newspaper, Li said that, in addition to bolstering economic ties, he hoped "to present the real China so as to change misperceptions and ease misgivings" and also "to draw on British perspectives and experience".

Li's trip to Britain is the first by a Chinese premier since his predecessor Wen Jiabao visited in 2011. The last president to go was Hu Jintao in 2005, in a visit dogged by protests by pro-Tibet and human rights campaigners.

China's leaders reduced diplomatic contacts after Cameron met the Dalai Lama, whom Beijing describes as "a political exile engaged in anti-China separatist activities in the name of religion".

Ties began to thaw in June last year, when the two countries' foreign ministers spoke by phone.

That paved the way for Cameron to visit Beijing last December, where the British leader made a point of stressing business rather than politics and human rights.

Chinese-British trade reached $70 billion in 2013, a senior Chinese foreign ministry official said last week, adding that the total was expected to reach "new highs" in 2014.

After visiting Britain, Li will travel to Greece to meet Prime Minister Antonis Samaras and President Karolos Papoulias. His trip lasts until June 21.

A Communist official has issued a "high-profile warning" about ideological problems at China's top think-tank, domestic media said Monday, as the party leadership exerts its authority over state-run institutions.

Experts at the state-affiliated Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) are spreading false ideas online and allowing foreign "infiltration" in its work, warned Zhang Yingwei, a senior anti-corruption official with the ruling Communist Party, the Global Times reported.

Zhang also accused the think-tank -- which makes policy recommendations to the government -- of using academic research as a disguise for other purposes and fabricating false theories using the Internet, the newspaper reported.

He urged staff at CASS to "remain highly alert to political sensitive issues with no one making exceptions", and to "strengthen ideology construction", it said.

The warnings come as overseas critics say China's already-limited academic freedom is in peril.

At the end of last year, Peking University professor Xia Yeliang -- one of the original signatories of Charter 08, a daring petition urging greater protection of human rights and democratic reforms in China -- lost his post.

The Global Times linked Zhang's warning to "sweeping anti-graft campaigns targeting government officials and state-owned enterprises" launched by the party leadership that took power under Xi Jinping in late 2012.

The campaign -- which has been widely touted by President Xi -- has netted a number of high- and low-ranking officials, but in the absence of systemic reforms analysts say it serves more to exert political control than to eliminate corruption.

Since taking charge, Xi has also presided over the arrests of dozens of rights activists, as well as a crackdown on popular bloggers and the spread of "rumours" through social media.

Social media sites such as the Twitter-like microblog Sina Weibo have become a popular alternative source of information to the tightly censored, state-controlled media.

CASS conducts research on politics, economics, history and other fields.

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