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China's glamorous first lady steals the spotlight
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 23, 2013


Japan seeks summit with Chinese leaders: minister
Tokyo (AFP) March 24, 2013 - Japan will seek a bilateral summit between its prime minister and China's new leaders as early as May as part of efforts to defuse an ongoing diplomatic row, Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida said Sunday.

Kishida, speaking on public broadcaster NHK, said the meeting may be possible on the sidelines of the annual trilateral summit with China and South Korea, which usually takes place in May.

"As for a Japan-China summit meeting, we recognise the importance of communication between national leaders," Kishida said.

"We have a three-way meeting with China and South Korea at around May every year... We will seek an opportunity of dialogue at such occasions," he said.

But Kishida admitted the details of this year's trilateral summit, which is to be hosted by South Korea, have yet to be finalised.

Japan's hawkish Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has had no summit meetings with Chinese leaders since he took power in December amid a diplomatic row over disputed islands in the East China Sea -- called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China.

A report said Friday that Abe will send his Deputy Prime Minister Taro Aso to China next month in what would be the first high-level meeting of the Asian powers' new governments.

Japan's Sankei Shimbun daily said Aso planned to meet with President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang, both of whom were confirmed in the top posts after a once-in-a-decade power transition this month.

Abe has used a tough rhetoric over the spat with China.

Beijing has repeatedly sent ships and aircraft near the islands and both sides have scrambled fighter jets, though there have been no clashes.

However, Abe has also offered peace overtures to China, repeatedly saying the Japan-China relationship was among Tokyo's most-important ties.

China's glamorous first lady has become a media and Internet sensation as she accompanies husband President Xi Jinping on a state visit to Russia.

Already famous and immensely popular in her homeland due to her long career as a singer, Peng Liyuan set Chinese media and social network sites abuzz with her elegant style from the moment she stepped off the plane in Moscow on Friday.

Photographs of Peng and Xi were plastered across the front pages of state media, which usually do not focus on the country's first ladies.

Major newspapers in Beijing Saturday featured a shot of the Chinese leader and his wife smiling as they left their plane, rather than a photo of Xi's handshake with President Vladimir Putin on his first overseas trip as head of state.

Carrying a handbag and wearing a navy blue coat standing beside her husband, Peng was even shown briefly arm-in-arm with Xi in a public display of affection rare among the communist leadership.

"Since yesterday this has become the main topic of discussion for people," said Li Jun, a commentator with a major Nanjing newspaper.

"Peng Liyuan is elegant and gracious, which could reduce the perception of China as an international threat," he said, adding that she could help "demystify the Chinese leadership".

Peng's image of youth and spontaneity was in stark contrast to what the Chinese public have grown accustomed to over the past 30 years.

"This scene makes the Chinese happy because they have been waiting for it for a long time," said Hu Xijing, editor of the Global Times, while regretting that the media's comments did not give the event the importance it deserved.

Peng did not stop smiling before and during the official welcome from their Russian hosts.

That smile and her sense of style attracted widespread attention on China's Twitter-like microblogs.

"What elegance!" said one charmed commentator using the name "Lanpingzigaidexingfu".

"What a beauty," added "Renxiaoxuanxuan", while a more restrained "Yanhuozhiqiu" praised her as being "dignified" and "open minded".

Peng's coat was the particular object of attention. Just hours after the first images were broadcast of her descending from the aircraft, copies of the garment were being offered on the Internet shopping site Taobao (China's version of eBay) for between 499 and 10,000 yuan ($80 and $1,600)

Since Jiang Qing, the last wife of Mao Zedong, the wives of Chinese leaders have remained mostly in the shadows.

Liu Yonqing, the austere and reserved wife of former president Hu Jintao, was rarely exposed to the limelight and usually seen standing behind her husband.

Peng, however, was already a household name in China thanks to her role over the past 25 years in the state television New Year gala, which is watched by millions of viewers.

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