Monday, 30 April 2012

US, China tap-dance around blind activist, seek resolution ahead of talks on broader themes

(Zeng Jinyan/ Associated Press ) - In this photo taken in late April, 2012, and released by Zeng Jinyan, blind Chinese legal activist Chen Guangcheng is seen at an undisclosed location in Beijing during a meeting with human rights activists Hu Jia and Zeng Jinyan. Chen, an inspirational figure in China’s rights movement, slipped away from his well-guarded rural village on April 22, 2012, and made it to a secret location in Beijing on Friday, April 27. Activists say Chen is under the protection of U.S. diplomats in Beijing.The blind Chinese lawyer at the center of a diplomatic storm between Washington and Beijing is a taboo topic in each capital. Neither side wants the biggest human-rights issue between the two since Tiananmen Square to disrupt high-level strategic and economic talks set to begin Thursday.

President Barack Obama’s administration and China’s officials have signaled that the global economy, North Korea, Iran and Sudan — issues in which millions of lives are at stake — have become far more important in U.S.-Chinese relations. Thus, both refuse to admit anything is amiss as a high-profile dissident is believed to be sheltering with U.S. diplomats in China.

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U.S. and Chinese officials are ironing out a deal to secure American asylum for a blind Chinese activist who fled house arrest, with an agreement likely before Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrives this week, a U.S. rights campaigner said.
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A human rights activist says Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng is likely to get U.S. asylum this week. Chen, a blind lawyer, escaped from house arrest last week.

To listen to officials in both countries, Chen Guangcheng is an invisible man.

Obama himself refused to address the issue Monday, declining to confirm that the blind lawyer is under U.S. protection in China or that American diplomats are attempting to negotiate an agreement for him to receive asylum.

“Obviously, I’m aware of the press reports on the situation in China, but I’m not going to make a statement on the issue,” the president said at a joint White House news conference with Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda.

He added obliquely, “What I would like to emphasize is that every time we meet with China the issue of human rights comes up.”

Speaking later, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton similarly declined to talk about Chen but said she would raise human rights issues at the upcoming meetings in Beijing. She said she and Obama had worked hard to have “an effective, constructive and comprehensive” relationship with the Chinese.

“A constructive relationship includes talking very frankly about those areas where we do not agree, including human rights,” she said. “That is the spirit that is guiding me as I take off for Beijing tonight. And I can certainly guarantee that we will be discussing every matter, including human rights, that is pending between us.”

Clinton added that “the freedom and free movement of people inside China” were “issues of great concern to us.”

Neither Obama nor Clinton offered information as the administration and the Chinese government sought to prevent the biggest human-rights issue with China since the 1989 Tiananmen Square demonstrations from disrupting high-level strategic and economic talks set to begin in Beijing on Thursday. Clinton left Washington for Beijing late Monday night.

Earlier, State Department spokesman Victoria Nuland was also tight-lipped, refusing to answer any questions about Chen. She confirmed that the top U.S. diplomat for Asia, Kurt Campbell, is in Beijing to prepare for the fourth round of the Strategic and Economic Dialogue, but would not say if he was discussing Chen and pointedly did not utter the dissident’s name.

Campbell arrived in Beijing early Sunday, at least a day ahead of schedule, and, according to activists, is in intensive discussions with the Chinese to strike a deal over where Chen should go — to asylum in the United States or somewhere in China or a third location — before Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner get there. 

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