Clinton in China pushes environment, finance
合眾社 MATTHEW LEE
BEIJING – U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
and Chinese officials agreed Saturday to focus their
governments' efforts on stabilizing the battered global
economy and combating climate change, putting aside
long-standing concerns about human rights.
...
"It is essential that the United States and China have a
positive, cooperative relationship," Clinton told reporters
at a joint news conference with Yang. She said that they
also agreed on the need to develop clean energy
technology that would use renewable sources and safely
store the dirty emissions from burning coal.
With the export-heavy Chinese economy reeling from the
U.S. downturn, Clinton sought to reassure China that its
massive holdings of U.S. Treasury notes and other
government debt would remain a good investment.
"I appreciate greatly the Chinese government's continuing
confidence in United States treasuries. I think this is well-
grounded confidence," she said. "We have every reason
to believe that the United States and China will recover,
and together we will help lead the world recovery."
Yang said China wants its foreign exchange reserves --
the world's largest at $1.95 trillion -- invested safely, with
good value and liquidity. He said future decisions on using
them would be based on those principles, but added that
China wanted to continue work with the U.S.
"I want to emphasize here that the facts speak louder than
words. The fact is that China and the United States have
conducted good cooperation, and we are ready to
continue to talk with the U.S. side," Yang said.
Beijing is the last, and some analysts say, the most
important stop on Clinton's weeklong visit to Japan,
Indonesia, South Korea and China. She was to meet
China's president and premier as well as tour a
geothermal power plant before leaving Sunday.
Along with cooperating on the financial crisis and climate
change, the United States wants China to step up efforts
to address threats like Iran and North Korea's nuclear
programs and tenuous security situations in Afghanistan
and Pakistan.
In addition, Clinton said the U.S. would like to see China
play a positive role in Myanmar and Sudan, two countries
which receive large Chinese investments but whose
governments are at odds with Washington.
The emphasis on the global economy, climate change and
security highlight the growing importance of U.S.-China
relations, which have often soured over disagreements on
human rights.
But ahead of the talks, Clinton signaled that China's poor
human rights record, while still of deep concern to the
United States, would not be at the top of her agenda.
She noted that both sides already knew the other's
positions on the matter and said that human rights
concerns "can't interfere with the global economic crisis,
the global climate change crisis and the security crises."
...
"Human rights are part of our comprehensive agenda,"
she said.
...
Yang appeared pleased by Clinton's reply, saying China
was happy to engage on human rights with the United
States but only "on the basis of equality and
noninterference in each other's internal affairs."
Authorities in Beijing are facing a difficult year on the
rights front as they try to muffle dissent ahead of
politically sensitive anniversaries: 20 years since the
crushing of the Tiananmen Square democracy movement
and 50 since the failed Tibetan uprising that forced the
Dalai Lama to flee into exile.
...
轉貼自︰
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090221/ap_on_re_as/as_clinton_china
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