BEIJING, Nov. 30 (Xinhua) -- Most Chinese netizens
support China's decision to postpone a Sino-EU summit as an reaction against a
planned meeting between French President Nicolas Sarkozy and the Dalai Lama.
A survey conducted on the Huanqiu.com, affiliated to
People's Daily, showed about 98 percent of netizens voted for the decision.
As of Sunday night, the survey, asking whether you
support China's decision to postpone the Sino-EU summit, received more than
48,000 votes, and only 980 voted "no".
"The decision was reasonable," said a netizen called
Liu Xiaotai.
"We should also start boycotting French commodities,"
said an anonymous netizen, echoed by many others.
China on Wednesday decided to put off the 11th
China-European Union Summit scheduled for next week in France, after Sarkozy,
whose country holds the EU's rotating presidency, insisted on meeting with the
Dalai Lama after the summit.
China had no choice but to react, the Foreign
Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said on Friday in a statement.
"China firmly opposes any contacts with the Dalai
Lama by foreign leaders in whatever form.
"The Tibet issue is related to China's sovereignty
and territorial integrity and touches on China's core interests," Qin said.
However, the Foreign Ministry said on Friday that
China would not change its determination and policy to actively develop EU-China
comprehensive and strategic partnership.
Wu Jianmin, a senior diplomat in China, came up with
three principles for the Sino-EU cooperation at the 8th Annual Summit of the
World Trade Organization held on Saturday.
"We should have mutual respect, focus on the issues
of major concerns, and address differences in a proper way," Wu said.
Earlier this April, many Chinese people were angered
by the disruption of the Olympic torch relay in Paris and called for a boycott
against French companies.
FM: China "has no choice but to react" to French leader's Dalai Lama meeting
BEIJING, Nov. 28 (Xinhua) -- After the French announced their leader would meet the Dalai Lama, China had no choice but to react, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said here Friday in a statement.
France made the announcement brushing aside China's stance and bilateral relations, Qin said. Full story
China postpones summit with EU due to French leader's planned meeting with Dalai Lama
BEIJING, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- China has to postpone the 11th summit with the European Union scheduled in early December because of French leader's planned meeting with the Dalai Lama, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang said here Wednesday night.
The decision is made because the summit does not enjoy a good atmosphere, nor can it achieve expected goals, Qin said, adding the cause and responsibility do not lie on the Chinese side. Full story