Under blue skies, Beijing rolls out a red carpet for Obama and Putin
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| Beijing
Welcome to fairytale Beijing.听
聽The sky is blue, the air is clean, the traffic flows. And all because China is hosting the likes of Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin at a summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, Asia鈥檚 premier trade forum.
President Xi Jinping, chairing a major international meeting for the first time, has spared no effort to impress his guests, including draconian steps to temporarily curb the capital鈥檚 notorious pollution.
The campaign goes well beyond China鈥檚 long tradition of hospitality. 鈥淣ever has so much time, energy, money, and propaganda been expended on an APEC summit,鈥 says Zhang Yunling, a former trade policy adviser to the Chinese government.
Nor is it wasted, in the eyes of the authorities. 鈥淭hey are using this meeting to build China鈥檚 image as the leader of Asia,鈥 says Zhang Lifan, a historian and independent commentator. 鈥淭his is an opportunity to present their status.鈥
Most APEC host nations organize the annual meetings in existing hotels and conference facilities. China has reportedly spent $6 billion on a purpose-built lakeside campus 40 miles outside Beijing and a new elevated expressway leading to the 595-room hotel, conference hall, and press center.
The government has chased away air pollution in equally dramatic fashion. Only half of Beijing鈥檚 cars will be allowed on the roads each day between Nov. 3聽and Nov. 12; more than 1,000 heavy industrial plants within a 120-mile radius of Beijing have been ordered to close; all construction sites have been suspended; and residents of Tianjin, a port city 90 miles east of Beijing, will not get any central heating until APEC is over.
All of Beijing鈥檚 schools and universities have been shut down for the week of the APEC summit, and all government employees have been given a mini-holiday, so as to reduce congestion in the capital. But that means no passports will be issued, no weddings registered, no taxes paid, in fact no official business done at all. And the partial car ban means that public transport is even more packed than normal. 聽
The police and other security forces, though, are working overtime. Fearing a possible terrorist attack by separatists from the predominantly Muslim province of Xinjiang, the government has stepped up roadblocks and security checks around the capital.
Trying to ensure a trouble-free event in the most pleasant circumstances possible is natural enough in any host government. And 鈥渢he tradition of caring about 鈥榝ace,鈥 wanting to show our best side, is part of Chinese culture,鈥 says Zhang Lifan.
Other governments might hesitate to inconvenience their citizens as much as Beijing residents are being told to put up with. Not so Beijing.听
鈥淥rdinary people are making sacrifices to meet the needs of foreign guests,鈥 says Liu Yuanju, a commentator for 鈥淒ajia,鈥 a popular Chinese Web magazine.
They are also making those sacrifices to satisfy the needs of China鈥檚 rulers. The APEC summit offers a chance for President Xi 鈥渢o show his confidence and leadership,鈥 says historian Zhang.
Paint the town green
This official mindset is not unfamiliar to Chinese citizens. Beijing officials have been known to send out workers armed with green paint to put a gloss on parched grass ahead of showcase functions.
Mr. Liu recalls how in 1972, when a freak snowstorm took the Chinese government by surprise on the eve of President Richard Nixon鈥檚 planned trip to the Great Wall, the authorities mobilized 100,000 people overnight to clear the route from the steps of Mr. Nixon鈥檚 guesthouse to the Great Wall, 45 miles away.
Now, as then, Liu says, 鈥渆veryone is mobilized to meet the needs of a diplomatic event.鈥
Behind this approach, he says, is the Chinese government鈥檚 craving for foreign approval. 鈥淭hat is how they get legitimacy for their achievements,鈥 Liu explains. One day, he hopes, 鈥淐hinese people's criticisms will count for more than foreign praise.鈥澛