BEIJING, April 3 -- Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson visited the Memorial Hall dedicated to late Chairman Mao Zedong in Beijing's Tian'anmen Square during his three-day visit to China.
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| Former heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson (R) pays respects to one of his greatest heroes by visiting waxen revolutionary Mao Zedong on Beijing's Tiananmen Square April 1. (Xinhua) |
A long-time admirer of the late Chinese leader, Tyson unexpectedly arrived in Beijing on Saturday
morning from Shanghai to pay his respects at the hall, the Beijing Times said
yesterday.
He arrived in Shanghai last Thursday for a three-day
visit to promote a new nightclub.
"I felt really insignificant next to the remains of
Chairman Mao," the paper quoted him as saying. "This is a great honour to be
able to visit the memorial hall."
Wearing a shirt with the picture of NBA centre
Shaquille O'Neal on it, the former champion looked in good spirits.
He said he expected to visit China again and attend
contests here, the newspaper said.
Tyson quickly left the crowded hall where the
embalmed remains of the late leader lie, after purchasing several books on Mao.
He also reportedly shouted "I love you" to Chinese
onlookers.
Later in Diaoyutai State Guesthouse, Tyson received a
statue from Pan Qinglin, a member of the Chinese People's Political Consultative
Conference, who personally invited him to visit Beijing.
Tyson, 39, became the youngest champion in
heavyweight history, when he took the title aged 20 in 1986, but he retired in
June last year with his career battered and bruised by a string of indiscretions
in and out of the ring.
While serving a prison sentence in the 1990s for
rape, Tyson claimed he read Mao's selected works and expressed admiration for
them. He even had his right arm tattooed with the late chairman to show his
respect.
Tyson left China yesterday morning and is scheduled
to revisit China in June.
(Source: China Daily)