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China's Hu winds up US visit amid protests

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut, Apr 21: President Hu Jintao told Yale University students today that China's rapid development was not a threat as he wrapped up a US visit amid demonstrations by several thousand people.

Hu visited the Ivy League campus a day after talks with US President George W Bush that were marred by gaffes and which failed to bridge gaps over the Chinese currency or on how to resolve nuclear disputes with Iran and North Korea.

In a speech to Yale students, Hu highlighted the doctrine of ''peaceful development'' which Beijing has put forth to allay fears about its growing economic and military clout.

''China's development will not compromise the interests of anyone, nor will China's development threaten anyone.'' As Hu entered the Yale campus in Connecticut, his final stop before flying on to Saudi Arabia, about 4,000 mostly ethnic Chinese detractors and supporters of China's communist government staged rival demonstrations.

''Stop killing Falun Gong practitioners and stop killing Falun Gong,'' shouted an ethnic Chinese woman who said she travelled from Australia to protest over China's treatment of the spiritual sect that Beijing banned and brutally crushed in 1999.

About 2,000 pro-China demonstrators, including ethnic Chinese women in silk red and white outfits, waved Chinese flags, danced and banged drums to welcome Hu.

Falun Gong activist Wang Wenyi yesterday disrupted Hu's elaborate White House welcome ceremony by heckling for three minutes while the flustered Chinese leader tried to speak.

''President Bush, make him stop persecuting Falun Gong,'' shouted Wang, who gained entry to the ceremony as a reporter with The Epoch Times, a sect-backed English newspaper. She was taken away by uniformed Secret Service officers and faces possible misdemeanor charges, US officials said.

TIBETANS, TAIWANESE REJECT CHINA

The Washington Post today chided the White House for what it called Hu's ''day full of indignities,'' beginning with the accreditation of Wang, who had once harassed Hu's predecessor in Malta.

The daily also noted that China's national anthem was introduced as that of the ''Republic of China,'' the formal name of China's rival, Taiwan, instead of the song of the People's Republic of China on the mainland.

Hu's trip was dogged at Yale and in Washington by hundreds of other protesters, including Taiwan nationalists waving green flags and Tibetan youth groups.

The Taiwan activists reject China's demand that the self- governing island democracy reunite with the mainland, while the Tibetan protesters want an end to Chinese rule there.

Speaking in the Oval Office yesterday, Bush and Hu said their relationship had matured and they could discuss differences openly. But Bush failed to win a commitment from Hu on immediate steps to reduce China's 202 billion dollar trade surplus with the United States.

The Chinese leader later told business leaders at a dinner that there were ''differences and even frictions'' in US-China relations. But Hu said he and Bush agreed to take steps to move forward to a more constructive and cooperative relationship.

''I certainly look forward to a future China-US relationship that is more stable, more mature and developed on a sounder track,'' Hu said in a question-and-answer session after his speech.

Hu said China would continue to improve the yuan's exchange rate, although he gave no specifics. Washington has demanded a revaluation of the yuan as a way to make US products more competitive in Chinese and global markets and reduce the trade imbalance.

Hu said China would work with the United States on the nuclear disputes with Iran and North Korea but urged a peaceful resolution through diplomacy.

REUTERS

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