Chinese quiz Obama on trade, Tibet and Yao Ming
By Chris Buckley
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese Internet users want to quiz U.S. President Barack Obama about trade feuds, basketball, Tibet and whether he will cede California to China, according to websites seeking questions for a "town hall" meeting.
Obama arrives on Sunday for a four-day visit to shore up ties between the world's biggest and third-biggest economies, and a public high point will be a planned question-and-answer meeting with young Chinese in Shanghai on Monday.
The White House hopes the quiz session will have a "web component," although details are still being negotiated, said Richard Buangan, a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Beijing.
"We're still in discussions with the Chinese government over whether the event will be broadcast live nationally and how it will be carried over the Internet," Buangan told Reuters from Shanghai, where he was helping to organise Obama's itinerary.
But state-run websites have already begun to solicit possible questions for Obama from the country's estimated 300 million Internet users, including via a Chinese-language website of the official Xinhua news agency (ask.home.news.cn/).
The questions collected reflect the mix of anxiety and expectation the U.S. president is likely to encounter when he meets President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao.
Obama's possible meeting with the Dalai Lama -- the exiled Tibetan leader scorned by Beijing as a "splittist" for demanding self-rule for his homeland -- ranks high among the worries of both China's Communist Party leaders and many citizens.
"Are you planning to meet the Dalai Lama after visiting China?," asks one Internet user. "We hope you'll respect the feelings of the Chinese people and not send the wrong signal to this character threatening Chinese sovereignty." Continued...



