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'Young and energetic' Macron wins Chinese fans
'Young and energetic' Macron wins Chinese fans
By Ludovic EHRET
Beijing (AFP) April 7, 2023

French President Emmanuel Macron met a warm welcome from the Chinese public on his state visit this week, a sharp contrast to the ongoing anger and protests against pension reforms back home.

Macron's three-day trip is intended to strengthen economic ties and press Beijing on the Ukraine crisis -- but many in China were charmed by the 45-year-old head of state, praising his looks and relaxed demeanour.

A screaming crowd of students and fans greeted Macron in the southern metropolis of Guangzhou on Friday, while social media bubbled over with posts about his appearance.

"He's very approachable, and he doesn't have the airs of other presidents," Yue Liang, a 34-year-old Beijing resident, told AFP.

"Macron is a very young and energetic president, and he has also made great efforts in various reforms."

"I love his voice," Liu Xin, a 43-year-old student of French at Beijing's Alliance Francaise, told AFP.

"He is a man with a lot of charm."

Multiple hashtags related to Macron's visit made the top 10 most searched items on the popular Weibo social media platform on Friday.

Many Weibo commenters said they were envious of students at Guangzhou's Sun Yat-Sen University, who took part in a question-and-answer session with the French president.

Macron and his entourage squeezed through a crowd of campus well-wishers, who held up their phones and reached out to touch him, fans shrieking in delight as he shook hands.

"I'm not gonna wash my hands today!" people can be heard saying in the background of videos of the encounter posted to Weibo.

Ye Ziyu, a 26-year-old dining at a French restaurant in Beijing's trendy Sanlitun neighbourhood, said she was also a Macron fan.

Most young people's "first impression of him is of his love story with his wife", she told AFP.

"We might not be very knowledgeable about his policies, but we still know a bit about him personally," she said.

The reception given to Macron has also prompted some on Chinese social media to point out the irony of the embattled president finding a brief respite from public vitriol thousands of miles from home.

Chinese students "welcome Macron like an idol, but in France, students would question him and even throw eggs and flour on him", one Shanghai-based Weibo user said in a post on Friday.

Macron mobbed at university on final day of China trip
Guangzhou (AFP) April 7, 2023 - French President Emmanuel Macron was greeted by a huge crowd at a university in southern China on Friday on the last day of a visit in which he repeatedly pushed his counterpart Xi Jinping to help end the Ukraine conflict.

Macron, who landed in the capital Beijing on Wednesday, said he was seeking to dissuade China from supporting Russia's invasion of its neighbour.

On Friday, he flew to the southern city of Guangzhou, where he was mobbed by hundreds of screaming students and fans desperate for a selfie or a high-five with the French leader, in stark contrast with China's own staid political system.

Macron, whose name was chanted by some in the crowd, then spoke to students in the campus gym and answered their questions before an early dinner with Xi ahead of meetings with Chinese investors and a flight home.

Russia's conflict with Ukraine has dominated Macron's visit to China -- his first since 2019.

And he told students in Guangzhou that the war was "a manifest violation of our international law".

Russia, he told them, was "a country that has decided to colonise its neighbour and not to respect the rules".

"The international order is now weakened and we have a responsibility, China and France, to preserve it and at the same time to reinvent it in the light of the realities of the 21st century," he said.

Macron also urged them to embrace a "critical spirit" that would allow them to become "free, rational individuals" -- another stark contrast with the rigid, state-controlled education to which Chinese students are subject.

- 'Bring Russia to its senses' -

In a joint statement late Friday, both sides pledged to "support all efforts to restore peace in Ukraine".

The statement, which did not name Russia or condemn its offensive, called on all parties to respect international law.

In talks with Xi on Thursday, Macron had said: "I can count on you to bring Russia to its senses and everyone to the negotiating table".

According to a French diplomat, Xi expressed a willingness to speak with Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky, but only when the time is right.

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen, who is accompanying Macron on his visit, welcomed Xi's openness to speaking with Zelensky.

In contrast with the amiable Macron, von der Leyen has struck a more firm tone in her talks with Chinese officials this week.

On Thursday, she said she had shared her "deep concerns about the deterioration of the human rights situation in China" with officials, and warned Beijing that arms shipments to Russia would "significantly harm" relations.

Moscow has poured cold water on prospects of Beijing's mediation, insisting on Thursday it had "no choice" but to press on with its Ukraine offensive.

"Undoubtedly, China has a very effective and commanding potential for mediation," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

"But the situation with Ukraine is complex, so far there are no prospects for a political settlement."

- Trade partnership -

Beyond the war in Ukraine, Macron's visit has also focused on firming up a crucial trade partnership.

The French leader is accompanied by more than 50 French business leaders, including the top bosses of Airbus, EDF and Veolia.

Airbus announced Thursday it would open a second final assembly line in China that will double its production capacity in the country, with the framework for the deal signed by CEO Guillaume Faury in Beijing.

The firm said Friday that it had agreed to sell 50 helicopters to the Chinese leasing firm GDAT.

Asia has become a key market for both Airbus and its US rival Boeing, as demand for air travel climbs with an expanding middle class.

Macron's trip to China also comes as he faces challenges at home, with mounting anger over controversial pension reforms leading to fresh clashes between protesters and police in Paris on Thursday.

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