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We have such good friends in the Chinese!  NOT!!!  --  Bill

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http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-022302chibush.story?coll=la%

2Dhome%2Dtodays%2Dtimes
China Censors Bush Speech in Print
 Asia: President's remarks on freedom and faith are edited out of a
transcript released by a state-run news agency.



By HENRY CHU, Times Staff Writer


BEIJING -- The Chinese government responded to President Bush's call for
religious tolerance Friday by promptly editing out his remarks on freedom and
faith in its transcript of a speech that Bush delivered on live national
television.

Before the U.S. leader had even boarded Air Force One to return to Washington
on Friday afternoon, China's state-controlled media put out their version of
the morning address, in which Bush spoke to an audience of university
students.

Almost half the speech--large chunks extolling American liberty and urging
China to relax its political and religious restrictions--was simply hacked
out in the transcript released by the official New China News Agency. The
heavy censorship prompted indignant complaints on the Internet from people
who demanded that the full text be restored.

"Why must the New China News Agency kid itself?" someone using the name
Crawler asked in one chat room. "Does striking out someone's words mean the
person never said them?"

Others took to posting the censored portions for others to read. "The Chinese
media always distort the facts," another cyber-citizen wrote. "Everyone ought
to compare the live remarks with the subsequent transcript."

Bush's speech at Qinghua University in Beijing, along with a half-hour
question-and-answer session afterward, was broadcast Friday morning on
China's premier television channel, which reaches hundreds of millions of
households.

It was only the second time an American president has had the opportunity of
addressing the Chinese people directly, and one of Beijing's most widely read
newspapers publicized the event beforehand.

But the censored transcript demonstrated the ambivalence of the Communist
regime toward the United States. Although top leaders publicly advocate
stronger ties with Washington and agreed to the White House's request for
live air time, they remain sensitive to any criticism of their rule.

The excised portions of Bush's speech contained praise for America's civic
spirit and its status as "a beacon of hope" for people around the world.
Bush's criticism of some Chinese textbooks' portrayal of U.S. society also
was dropped. So were his comments on his personal faith, his call for an end
to religious persecution here, his description of the Statue of Liberty and
his declaration that freedom need not mean chaos.

Even his praise for the courage of the firefighters and police officers who
died trying to save victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on the U.S. got
the ax.

One thing that remained was a brief civics lesson on the separation of powers
in U.S. government and the fact that political authority derives from a "free
vote of the people." But Bush's wish that the Chinese might one day choose
their own national leaders was expunged.

Still, the speech did get beamed live and uncensored over the airwaves Friday
morning, potentially seen by hundreds of millions of viewers.

And state-run media have spoken warmly of Bush's visit as an important event
in Sino-U.S. relations, even though the Chinese generally have been skeptical
of Bush, whom they regard as less friendly toward their country than was
President Clinton.

Talks between Bush and President Jiang Zemin were described as "positive,
constructive and fruitful" by the Foreign Ministry, although no major
agreements were reached. In addition, Bush had a chance Friday to meet Vice
President Hu Jintao, who is expected to become president next year.

The two men spoke briefly before Hu introduced Bush to the audience at
Qinghua. Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan said Hu thanked Bush for an
invitation to visit the U.S., which he has accepted.

After the speech at Qinghua, a school often billed as China's MIT, some of
those who attended gave Bush fairly high marks.

"I think Bush spoke well. Not that I agreed with everything he said," said
Zhang Kaicun, 49, a worker at Qinghua who was allowed to attend.

Bush's comments about religious persecution in China didn't ring true to
Zhang. "More and more people are turning to religion in China. I know a lot
of religious people," he said. "They're Buddhists, and they're under no
pressure whatsoever."

During the question-and-answer period, the first two of six questions by
students grilled Bush on his policy toward Taiwan, the biggest sticking point
in U.S.-China relations. Beijing regards the island as its rightful
territory.

The questions, both of them applauded by the audience, reflected the growing
nationalism among Chinese youth, a sentiment actively fostered by the
government. Four years ago, at a similar event, students at Qinghua's rival
institution, Beijing University, asked Clinton whether, beneath his smiles,
the U.S. was intent on containing China.

On Friday, Bush said he is committed to helping Taiwan defend itself if
attacked but stressed that he wants to see a "peaceful settlement" of the
stalemate.

Student Zhang Jing said she found the response rather tepid. "It's a
diplomatic answer," she said.




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