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Obama urges online freedom in maiden China visit

Obama urges online freedom in maiden China visit AFP – US President Barack Obama, seen here, has arrived in Beijing from Shanghai, for the second leg of his …

SHANGHAI (AFP) – US President Barack Obama on Monday arrived in Beijing from Shanghai, for the second leg of his maiden state visit to China.

Obama arrived in China on Sunday on a three-day mission aimed at convincing Beijing that Washington is its partner, not its rival.

In a town hall speech in Shanghai, the US leader pushed for an unshackled Internet and expanded political freedoms as he sought to get around China's media curbs.

He also said the United States and China, two economically interlocked rivals, need not be adversaries, appealing to millions of Chinese web surfers on the first day of his first visit to what he termed "a majestic country". Obama's speech

"I have always been a strong supporter of open Internet use. I am a big supporter of non-censorship," Obama said, before flying to Beijing for talks with Chinese President Hu Jintao.

"I think that the more freely information flows, the stronger a society becomes," said Obama in a nation where communist authorities have for months blocked Internet sites such as Twitter, YouTube and Facebook.

Obama's decision to tap the power of the web was highly symbolic: the grassroots movement he built to win the White House in 2008 was largely built on Internet freedoms restricted by the "Great Firewall of China".

The president fielded questions from his audience of university students as well as Internet users, speaking on subjects ranging from "universal rights" and Taiwan to Chinese NBA basketball star Yao Ming.

Audience members, while showing great respect for Obama, rarely asked questions deviating from the official Chinese government line, and the forum appeared tightly controlled by the authorities.

The most interesting question -- on Internet freedoms -- came via email, and was read out to Obama by the US ambassador to China, Jon Huntsman.

Having been accused of downplaying rights concerns to appease China, Obama called for the observance of "universal rights" of political expression, religious freedom and free information everywhere.

"They should be available to all people, including ethnic and religious minorities, whether they are in the United States, China, or any nation," Obama said, though he noted that his own country was not perfect.

But the US leader did not specifically mention sensitive issues like China's rule over Tibet, after declining to meet exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama in the United States before making his high-profile inaugural visit to Beijing.

"The notion that we must be adversaries is not predestined," Obama said, walking a fine line between standing up for US interests on trade and human rights and seeking Chinese backing on issues such as Iran and North Korea.

He leavened his call for expanded freedoms with praise for China as a "majestic country", marvelling at the "soaring skyscrapers" of Shanghai and the relics of China's "distant past" he hoped to see in Beijing.

The White House streamed the event on its website, which jammed several times but was visible on local servers. A live transcript was posted on the website of state news agency Xinhua, which appeared faithful to Obama's answers in English.

The broadcast on local Shanghai television was delayed by several seconds, but Obama's answers were audible under the simultaneous translation in Chinese.

China's communist authorities were taking no chances on security, with roads leading to the venue at Shanghai's imposing Science and Technology Museum closed to normal traffic and the area around the venue deserted. Uniformed security agents were deployed en masse.

The authorities also apparently kept close control on the students allowed to attend the meeting, selected by professors at Shanghai-area universities.

Obama later boarded Air Force One and flew to Beijing, where he was due to attend a private dinner with Hu.

After a day of talks and some sight-seeing, Obama will be honoured with the lavish pageantry of a state dinner.

Obama came to China hoping to convince its leaders that Washington was not trying to rein in its fast growth and growing diplomatic weight.

"The United States does not seek to contain China, nor does a deeper relationship with China mean a weakening of our bilateral alliances," Obama said in a speech in Tokyo on Saturday.

"On the contrary, the rise of a strong, prosperous China can be a source of strength for the community of nations."

But tough talk on the economy was looming.

A Chinese commerce ministry spokesman on Monday accused the United States of increasing protectionism and said American calls to let the yuan rise were "unfair".