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Nobel Peace Prize a bid to embarrass China: state media

Philippine Nobel no-show a bid to save drug mules in China
Manila (AFP) Dec 12, 2010 - The Philippines skipped the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony in an attempt to encourage China to spare the lives of five of its nationals on death row, officials said Sunday. President Benigno Aquino told a newspaper staying away from the ceremony to honour jailed Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo had been "in our national interest", a reference to convicted Filipinos in China. The comments in The Daily Inquirer came the day after local press rounded on Manila's decision to apparently bow to Chinese pressure and turn down an invitation to the ceremony in Oslo. "Our interest is to advance our citizens' needs first," the paper quoted the president as saying.

The daily said Aquino had written to Beijing seeking clemency for five Filipinos sentenced to death for drug trafficking. "It's in our national interest that we do not, at this time, send a representative to the Nobel award rites," he told the paper ahead of the ceremony. Aquino's spokesman Herminio Coloma and foreign department spokesman Eduardo Malaya confirmed the president was referring to a bid to obtain clemency for the five. Asked if the Nobel boycott was linked to the effort to save prisoners' lives, Coloma said on government radio: "As our president said, we need to balance the overall national interest. "That's the reason why we took that particular step with regard to that specific issue (Nobel award boycott) that was raised last week."

Asked if Manila's boycott was an attempt to appease China and save the lives of the five, Malaya said: "The President's remark speaks for itself. That's the line." Chinese embassy spokesman Sun Yi confirmed Sunday that Aquino had written to Beijing over the prisoners but denied that the issue was linked to Manila's decision to skip the Nobel awards ceremony. The official reason for the no-show was a scheduling clash but several top-level officials have admitted privately Manila wanted to appease China. China reacted furiously to the Nobel Committee's award of this year's honour to Liu, jailed for 11 years last December on subversion charges. It repeatedly warned governments around the world that ties would be harmed if they attended the ceremony.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 11, 2010
China's state media on Saturday lashed out at the Nobel Peace Prize committee for the "political farce" of recognising Liu Xiaobo, after an empty chair stood in for the jailed dissident in Oslo.

Beijing said Friday's ceremony in the Norwegian capital, where the prize was presented in absentia to the imprisoned democracy activist, was "political theatre" and a product of a "Cold War mentality".

"Honouring someone the government dislikes may serve to embarrass China in this year's case, but that is almost all," the China Daily, an English-language government mouthpiece said in an editorial on Saturday.

"Embarrassing as it may be, the fanfare in Oslo offers a rare opportunity to update and enrich the diplomatic outlook of ordinary Chinese. Not everyone in the world wants China's social and political stability to continue."

Liu, a writer who has advocated political reform in China for more than two decades, was jailed in December 2009 for 11 years on subversion charges after co-authoring Charter 08, a bold petition calling for change.

Beijing has reacted with fury to the award, describing the Norwegian Nobel Committee as "clowns" and threatening that countries would face unspecified "consequences" if they did not stay away from the ceremony.

It also barred the jailed dissident or a representative from travelling to Oslo to receive the award.

The China Daily editorial played down the prize's significance, saying the award was "hardly worth the fuss and hoopla".

"Quite a few Westerners cherish the naive hope that the prize will 'enlighten the Chinese on human rights' and instigate the changes they wish to see in the country," the editorial said.

"They have been too preoccupied with their own fantasies to realise what is happening in the real world," it added.

In a commentary on Saturday, the official news agency Xinhua cited a mid-October poll by the Communist Party's Global Times newspaper that indicated 77.1 percent of respondents did not know who had won the peace prize.

It did not mention, however, the poll -- whose questions did not name Liu -- was conducted after a week-long state media blackout on reporting about the award.

"The whole event has become an out-and-out political farce," the Xinhua commentary said.

"It's unimaginable that such a farce, the like of which is more commonly seen in cults, is being staged on the civilised continent of Europe," the Global Times said in an earlier commentary.

Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu, speaking as the ceremony to award the 2010 Peace Prize to Liu was taking place in Oslo, said the event "cannot represent the overall majority of the people of the world".

She reiterated Beijing's insistence that the award to Liu was an attempt to foment unrest in China and bring political instability to the world's most populous nation.

"This kind of political theatre will never shake the determination and the confidence of the people of China to uphold the road of socialism with Chinese characteristics."

Nobel Committee chairman Thorbjoern Jagland placed this year's peace prize on an empty chair Friday as last year's laureate US President Barack Obama led calls for Liu to be set free.

It was only the second time in the history of the prize that no one had been at the ceremony to collect the award.

The first time was in 1936 when German journalist and pacifist Carl von Ossietzky was locked up in a Nazi concentration camp.

On mainland China, authorities blacked out coverage of the event, cutting off live broadcasts of the event by CNN and the BBC.

Many activists and dissidents were either unaccounted for or under strict surveillance before the ceremony, rights groups said.

Among them was lawyer Mo Shaoping, whose firm represents Liu. He was taken from his office on Friday to a detention centre outside Beijing, Chinese Human Rights Defenders said in a statement.



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SINO DAILY
Empty chair for Chinese laureate Liu at Nobel Peace ceremony
Oslo (AFP) Dec 10, 2010
The head of the Nobel committee placed this year's peace prize on an empty chair Friday as Beijing raged against the award to dissident Liu Xiaobo, who is languishing in a Chinese prison cell. As Communist authorities in Beijing fumed at the prize for the 54-year-old author and pro-China demonstrators gathered near the Oslo awards venue, last year's laureate US President Barack Obama led cal ... read more







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