One article from “le Point”

Last time I had a nice interview by walking on Champs-Elysées with Raffarin, the other “good friend” of China besides Chirac, was in November, right before his plane with the new elected French President for China.

And this time, still a trip for cooperation and friendship, he became the “messenger” of the French President, situation even more serious than his famous trip to China during the SARS in 2003. In our “traditional” appointment right before his trip to China, he told me in his office that he will take the message of Friendship and confidence to Chinese government with a biography about the General de Gaulle, in which Sarkozy had signed his name.

Here is an article on his return which I found interesting:


Raffarin : “La Chine a quitté la route de la dictature”

Par Charlotte Chaffanjon

De retour de Chine, Jean-Pierre Raffarin poursuit son opération pour détendre les relations sino-françaises. “Nous voulons l’apaisement, nous voulons la non-violence”, explique lundi matin sur RTL l’ancien Premier ministre.

L’émissaire de Nicolas Sarkozy assure que “c’est par le dialogue que l’on peut régler un conflit de ce genre”. Par le dialogue peut-être, par la diplomatie sûrement. “La France ne veut pas choisir entre deux thèses, celle qui présente le dalaï-lama comme non violent et au-dessus des partis, et celle qui le présente comme un chef de gouvernement en exil”, explique Jean-Pierre Raffarin, soucieux de ménager la Chine, où des manifestations antifrançaises et des appels au boycott des magasins Carrefour se sont déroulés la semaine dernière.

“Ce n’est dans l’intérêt de personne de voir la Chine en grande difficulté”, se justifie le secrétaire général délégué de l’UMP, dans le sillage de Nicolas Sarkozy, qui avait jugé jeudi dernier lors de son interview télévisé e qu’il n’était pas possible de mettre ce grand pays “au ban de l’humanité”. “La Chine est le banquier du monde. Les Chinois financent le déficit américain. La Chine a quitté la route de la dictature”, assure Jean-Pierre Raffarin, même s’il admet qu’elle ne correspond pas “au modèle de démocratie occidentale”.

Interrogé sur l’attitude que doit adopter la France concernant les Jeux olympiques, son verdict est sans appel : pas de boycott. “La Chine a besoin des JO. Il faut réussir ces Jeux pour la paix du monde”. Jean-Pierre Raffarin appelle donc Nicolas Sarkozy à se rendre à la cérémonie d’ouverture et à faire de l’événement “une grande fête de la jeunesse”.

Par ailleurs, le sénateur de la Vienne est revenu sur l’interview donnée pendant son séjour dans l’empire du Milieu au China Daily . Il y expliquait que la proposition de Bertrand Delanoë , approuvée par le Conseil de Paris , de faire du dalaï-lama un citoyen d’honneur de la Ville de Paris était une “une très grave erreur politique”. “Mes propos ont été amplifiés par la traduction. J’ai seulement dit que c’était inopportun. Quand la France cherche à apaiser, c’est dommage que la collectivité locale cherche à attiser.”

Posted by Liu Yi on May 1st, 2008

Filed under France, Politics, Press | 1 Comment »

The famous military monks

http://news.wenxuecity.com/messages/200804/news-gb2312-556727.html

1/ They are policemen, not army;

2/ From 01/01/2005, all the police had changed their decorations and logos on their uniforms

3/ From 13/10/2004, all the Chinese ‘pusse-pusse’ had changed unanimously the curtain with the traditional blue, red and green colors, while not the blue ones your can see in the picture.

Finally, I found where it came from this picture which could bring big imagination:

During a shooting of a film, the polices are hired for playing monks in the film.

Posted by Liu Yi on April 21st, 2008

Filed under France, Press | 1 Comment »

Finally……he is not the smartest one, but at least the most couraged one till now……

http://fr.youtube.com/watch?v=3n5IflGGIas

Posted by Liu Yi on April 16th, 2008

Filed under France, Politics, Press | No Comments »

the torch

the girl on wheelchair has only one leg, and the guy behind her could not see anything……Though being hurt, she had protected the Olympic torch with her arms
but where are the 400 polices supposed to be around the torch as the “protection ball”, called by the press?!
mypictr_360x300.png

Posted by Liu Yi on April 8th, 2008

Filed under France, Press | 7 Comments »

The Olympic Flame is the symbol of peace, not violence

The Olympic Flame is the symbol of peace, not violence

I’ve got the itinerary of the torch in Paris in February as the only media attended the last meeting between the French Olympic committee and the Chinese one, but I was told to keep it as the top secret.

Today I could see how serious it becomes now: the President of the “Journalists With No Borders” ( Reporters sans Frontiers ) spoke in front of everyone with menaced tune to the Mr. SERANDOUR, the President of the Comité national olympique et sportif français (CNOS) since 1993, that if he still refuse to let him accompany the Olympic torch with his famous handcuff T-shirt, things will get messy and Mr: SERANDOUR has to take the responsibility…….
“……………..it is already a symbol of democracy and human right today we let you express your opinion here in the press conference organised by the Olympic Committee and the Paris City Hall……I will not let you in the occasion of the French sportsmen handling the symbol of Olympic and the peace… my answer is no, and I am assuring my responsibility. …………….You are menacing of making a situation even yourself could not taking responsibilities, thus you are a man irresponsible….”
Of course, I doubt whether there will be any French media using these sentences as obviously, as soon as the RSF took the microphone, most of journalists were so excited, seem they were waiting only this!
I do respect the organisation and what they had done in the world to get the respect of the journalists, and protect very much the freedom of making reports, and even lots times, the safety of our journalists, I do admire their courage.

But today, I saw only a fanciful furious man threatening with violence towards the symbol universal of peace and union, and fair playing.

Not because I am a Chinese, but I will feel the same no matter which country it is.

In the capital of the country where came the creator of the modern Olympic Games, Human rights and freedom became the best weapon to take the peace and union, the sports people worldwide, the Chinese people who are all expecting this first chance to really open to the world as hostage.

Anyway, I do enjoy the interview with David Douillet who looks much less violent though he is much bigger:-))))

He told me that he did regret of never having any competition in China before, and he wants to give the message to all the sportsmen in the world: Live the most beautiful show!

Posted by Liu Yi on April 2nd, 2008

Filed under France, Misc, Press | No Comments »

an article written by a Finland visitor but refused by several international newspapers

The Riots in Lhasa

  by Eirik Granqvist, a foreign expert in Shanghai who visited Tibet in 2006

  ”The western medias announced that China had cut all information and that articles about the riots could not be sent out! I got mad about all the apparently incorrect information and wrote this article and two other similar ones although I am not a journalist but just because I could not stand all the bad things about China that was told. I sent them by e-mail without problems and they arrived well but two newspapers did neither respond neither publish what I had written. The third answered and wanted a shorter version that was published many days later as a normal ‘readers voice’. What Dalai Lama had said was largely published every day together with a real anti-China propaganda. What I had written was apparently too China friendly for the ‘free press’.”

  I was very shocked by what I had seen in the television and been reading in China daily about the riots in Lhasa. The most that shocked me was anyhow may be not the cruel events by themselves but how the medias in my country of origin, Finland, reported the events. A friend has scanned and sent me articles and I have checked also myself what can be found at Internet.

  Very few Finnish people have ever visited Tibet, but I was there together with my wife in 2006. This was private persons and not as a part of a group-travel. I have seen Lhasa with my own eyes. I have been talking and chatting with people there. This was without any restrictions. Okay, we had a lovely and very competent guide that helped us much and took us where we wanted to go in the mornings but in the afternoons we were alone. Therefore I think that I have something to tell.

   I am also interested in history and know more than people in general. When writing this, I do not have any reference books so I write out of my memory. If I do a small mistake somewhere, I beg your pardon. Anyhow, I think that this gives my writing an objectivity. I am well aware of that I will be accused for this and that for writing what I think is the truth. I will be accused by those who think that they know but do not know and by those that haven’t seen by their own eyes.

  Tibet was for centuries an autonomous concordat between Nepal and China. Sometimes China ruled Nepal as well. The king of Tibet used therefore to have one Chinese wife and one Nepalese and then a number of Tibetan ones.

  With the fifth Dalai Lama, the religious and the political power were unified under the rule of one person, The Dalai Lama. Tibet became a theocratic dictatorship and closed itself for the rest of the world. No foreigners were anymore allowed in.

  At the end of the nineteenth century, the famous Swedish traveller Sven Hedin made an attempt to reach Lhasa but was sent politely back, out of Tibet by Dalai Lama.

  A French woman, Alexandra David-Néel was more successful. She visited Lhasa dressed as a Tibetan pilgrim and she was fluent in the Tibetan language. She told how she was afraid many times that she should be discovered and then she knew that she like other suspects or opponents should “happen to fall down” from the walls of the Potala palace.

  Tibet was not a paradise. Tibet was an inhuman dictatorship!

  The weakened Chinese Qing Dynasty had more and more lost its influence in Tibet. Tibet became more and more interesting for the Russian empire in the north and the British in the south.

  In 1903 a British army expedition directed by the colonel Younghusband reached Lhasa. The British lost 4 soldiers but slaughtered more the 700 Tibetans that tryed to stop them, mainly by magic. The British installed “a commercial representation” in Lhasa. The Chinese evacuated Dalai Lama to the Qinghai plateau where he hade limited rights of move, probably for preventing him from having contacts with the British occupants.

  The Finnish national hero, Marshal Mannerheim, visited him there in 1907 during his famous horseback trip through central Asia. He was then a colonel in the Tsar Russian army and his trip was in reality a spy trip. Therefore the 13th Dalai Lama was interesting.

  The power of Dalai Lama was weakened. In 1950 the PLA marched in to Tibet without war. The 14th Dalai Lama seems at the beginning to have accepted this just as a security for his power as the theocratic dictator he was. He enlarged and restructured the Norbulingka Summer Palace in a luxury way in 1954.

  The Chinese decided anyhow to finish with the cruel theocratic dictatorship under which the opponents fell down from Potala. The borders where during this dictatorship closed for all foreigners and the only schools where the religious ones. It is well known that it is easier to rule a population with a low education and is ignoring the outside world. In Tibet, about 5% of the population owned everything and the rest literally nothing. About 40% of the Tibetans were monks and nuns living as parasites on the rest of the population that had to feed them. Tibet was not a paradise!

  Now China decided that the Tibetans should have the same rights and place in the society as the rest of the country’s population. The monasteries should be emptied from their excessively large monk and nun populations.

  Tibet could earlier be reached only by some horse trails and was for the rest insulated. The Chinese built rapidly a trafficable road. The insulation was broken.

  In 1959, the young Dalai Lama caused a peoples upraising, using the religion as power since he was loosing his own powerful position. The upraising was however stopped, may be in not a too clever and smooth manner. Dalai Lama then left Tibet and his fellow citizens and escaped to India wherefrom he has continued to fight for his come back and reinstall the theocratic dictatorship that China will never allow again.

  Then followed the ten years of Cultural Revolution that was an unhappy time for all China that closed itself to the rest of the world.

  Now Lhasa has a modern airport and a railway. China has invested a lot in Tibet. The standard of living has been raised a lot in Tibet and last Xmas I have seen Tibetans spending sun-holidays on Hainan Island! Very lucky looking old women in traditional dresses walking on the beach with their husbands and the youngsters dressed like other young people enjoying the beach life.

  The possibilities for Dalai Lama to take back his power has diminished and he does not anymore have the population with him. China and India are developing their cooperation and with the closer friendship, India will for sure also not more admit Dalai Lama to disturb this development. His possibilities to act against China will be diminished.

  Therefore he undertook recently an around the world diplomatic travel since he has seen the possibility of harming the now good international image of China and provoking boycotts of the Olympic games in Beijing.

  The Lhasa riots where very well prepared. Curriers where crossing the borders illegally for to see Dalai Lama and get his orders. A group of foreign mountain climbers filmed recently across the border an unlucky incident when one of these curriers got shot and another that crossed the border openly declared that he wanted to go to see the Dalai Lama. I have seen that in television just before I left for China in November.

  China is no longer a closed country. There is no need for illegal border crossings if you are not doing something illegally! You just ask for a passport and take the necessary visas and cross the border at a legal border crossing or better, just take a regular flight from Lhasa to Kathmandu!

   There where no peaceful demonstrations in Lhasa that where brutally knocked down! Young men went to action after a well prepared scenario at many places at the same time so that police and fire brigade should be taken by surprise and unable to act everywhere at the same time. This was successful! People where just knocked down without differences and all what could be broken was broken in the shortest possible time. With Molotov cocktails, fires where lit and fire cars where stopped. 18 normal citizens where killed without feelings and one police. The police had order to not respond with firearms for not being internationally blamed!

  When I have seen the filmed riots in television, my diagnosis was immediately clear. The scenario was the same that I had seen many times of organized riots in France since more the forty years of tight familiar contacts and 21 years of living there. The difference was only that less ordinary people seemed to take part in Lhasa. The rioters where surprisingly few but well organized! China’s positive image in the world should be damaged!

  Dalai Lama is acting as the friendly and peaceful father. This is an old trick that also dictators like Hitler and Stalin used. I am not comparing him with them but he is acting like a demon when he tries to take back his power at any cost, not once caring for human lives and against Buddhistic non-violence principles. It was a try to do a coup d’ètat that failed. Now he is asking for international help for to stop the violence that he, himself had planned!

  When I visited Tibet in 2006, I was surprised by the relaxed atmosphere and the few policemen in Lhasa. All that I have seen were Tibetans. Not the Han-Chinese. The atmosphere was remarkably peaceful and gave a picture of general well living. There was no oppressed feeling like I had seen so many times in the Soviet Union and its satellites before all that non-human system collapsed. People in Lhasa where friendly and wanted to speak to me, mostly without success since I do not speak Chinese nor Tibetan but up and then somebody could speak some words in English. Their wish for contact was just out of normal curiosity towards the foreigners.

  I had heard that the religious life should been oppressed but it was flowering! I had also heard that so many Han Chinese where moved in that the Tibetans where now very few in Lhasa. I did however see much more Tibetans there. May be that the Han Chinese where hiding?

  The western medias announced that China had cut all information and that articles about the riots could not be sent out! I got mad about all the apparently incorrect information and wrote this article and two other similar ones although I am not a journalist but just because I could not stand all the bad things about China that was told. I sent them by e-mail without problems and they arrived well but two newspapers did neither respond neither publish what I had written. The third answered and wanted a shorter version that was published many days later as a normal “readers voice”. What Dalai Lama had said was largely published every day together with a real anti-China propaganda. What I had written was apparently too China friendly for the “free press”.

Posted by Liu Yi on April 2nd, 2008

Filed under Press | 8 Comments »

Thanks to Mr. KOUCHNER that I had visited Slovene

On Tuesday two weeks before, during the press conference presented by the French Minister of Foreign Affairs, when he was being asked his opinion about the idea of boycot the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Beijing, Kouchner said “interesting” because it sounds “less negative than boycot the whole games……” all the media were talking about his “intention” of this boycot.

Actually he had insisted that it was too early to give his decision because he prefers to discuss this topic with his partners in European Union.

So, thanks to the suggestion of Mr. Kouchner, I had got this opportunity of following him to the capital of Slovene,Ljubijana,a city I had never prononced her name.

We were only 6 in the whole plane;
there were reception and shuttles for us at the gate of the airport;
we got our badge in 5minutes althouggh we had only made our late accreditation one day before leaving(miracle!)……
all these made the beginning of our trip very graceful.

Middle Europe is a region I know very little,but I do enjoy this trip of GYMNICH (The Informal Meeting of the Ministers of Foreign Affairs):
leasure atmosphere, more franly talks from all the ministers, fresh air,nice food, very kind staffs, delicated organisations etc.

mypictr_360x3001.jpg

Well, lots of journalists must be disappointed because the discussion of :whether boycot the Olympic Games in Beijing, or at least the opening ceremony, proposed by France had turned up an unanimous declaration of the 27 countries of the EU in which talked only about the condamnation of all the violences in Tibet and the close concerns of the situation, without even putting the word “Olympic” inside.

“We should seperate the politics from the sports”, says certain ministers; “there should not be connection between Tibet and the Olympic Games in Beijing”, from some others.

Answering in an interview, as I was the only Chinese journalist there, I said that I didn’t expect a “yes” or “no”, I was there just for showing what’s happening, and the decision if there will be any; but once again, I do not think the press should be more and more fond of creating a mess when there are not yet any messy situation just for attracting the attentions of the audience who are mostly, sorry to say that, but I think I am also part of them, too naiive.

I love this traditional restaurant made from an old house for the cows:-)

mypictr_360x350.jpg

Posted by Liu Yi on March 30th, 2008

Filed under France, Politics, Press, Travels | 1 Comment »

It’s a little bit late, but, better than never…

The first Chinese official ever in French media after almost 2 weeks:

http://www.europe1.fr/politique/videos/1324996/Jean-Pierre-Elkabbach-recoit-L-interview-de-Qu-Xing.html

Posted by Liu Yi on March 26th, 2008

Filed under France, Politics, Press | 1 Comment »

I choose to stay still, in silence

I’ve got several phone calls from some French Televisions for inviting me to join their programs in last one week. Of course, all were about the Tibet and the Olympic games of Beijing.

Well, I have to say that the Olympics had never been used as much as tools of politics in its whole history till now.

I kept on posing myself questions:

 Why suddenly Tibet became an “invaded country” by China since 1951 while it was already on the maps of China in French and English versions in the 18th century.
 Why the violence of burning, hitting and killing started by several “independent Tibetans” became a violence of the “Repression from the army of the Chinese Communist government”. I had seen much more forces during the fighting between the French police against the Paris suburb youngsters, which had never been called “repression” by any media.
 Why lots of foreign medias, as famous as RTL, CNN for example, showed violent images of Nepal police, saying that the Chinese police were beating the demonstrating monks to create such a scandal, then finished by only putting a small announcement to say “a pity” for this “mistakes”.

Chinese government, because of it’s difference (one party) became step by step the “enemy” of the “democratic countries” and the violence of some Tibetan had created the best reason to call on a movement to improve the human rights in China, though most of the people (including political people and journalists) shout had never ever put their feet in Tibet, even in China for many of them.

One of the reasons for all my whys is, in my opinion: The Chinese government really should change their habitude of trying to stop the journalists at the beginning, in the name of their safety. It’s been 30 years already that China opened its gate, for economies, it should really make a big effort to try to open the gate to media and journalists, especially in the critical moment, to not to let the media doubt any purpose of the government, as for them, in the name of safety, is just the same as no freedom.

Well, I am a journalist; I do not want to play a role of the government spokeswoman in all these programs in which the journalists had already their conclusions, neither want to be treated as a tool to show how much there is no democracy, no human rights in China, and how much all the non-Chinese have the duty to make China change with the condition of not boycotting the huge ever event which will bring China a big opportunity to change, even long after 2008, I choose to stay still, in silence.I respect the truth, support the actions of trying to fing the truth, but I refuse all the political benefits by using this event to jump on the middle of the scene.

But this politics movement is only a beginning, I am afraid.

Posted by Liu Yi on March 26th, 2008

Filed under France, Politics, Press | 4 Comments »

The popular “American hero”

Friday afternoon, right before the Eastern Holiday, the pre-candidate John Mc Cain arrived in France.

We arrived 15minutes before his arrival in Elysée, as usual, only find a long queue of the journalists, some of them even just ran from Matignon, where the senator just received by the French Prime Minister.

“I did not feel the spring at all, and there are too much more people than what I thought!” I spoke loudly to one media executive of Elysée because of the cold, when she asked me where I was fine.

Actually that’s how most of the journalists felt. We all thought that everyone had followed Sarkozy to visit the “Terrible” in Cherbourg. We were laughing at each other: hey, he is not yet even elected…as official candidate…:-))

After almost one hour’s waiting, Sarkozy, who was surprised also by seeing so many of us outside waiting, came out to the stages to say goodbye to the Senator. The “American hero” Mc Cain, who even took Putin as the German President once in his speech, had talked about almost all the international issues at the moment, even answered my question: What are the most important things you are going to talk with the Chinese government if you are elected as the President of United States.

“Tibet……”

mypictr_360x520.jpg

By the way, here is a very funny video sent to me, about the other two candidates:

http://blog.lefigaro.fr/electionsus08/2008/03/tina-fey-moliere-newyorkaise-e.html

Posted by Liu Yi on March 23rd, 2008

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