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MOC: China welcomes Carrefour’s statement against Tibet independence
BEIJING—China’s Ministry of
Commerce (MOC) on Tuesday welcomed French retail giant Carrefour’s
statement that opposes Tibet independence and supports Beijing Olympics.
China noted the French government and companies had taken positive
action to improve and safeguard bilateral relations, and firms including
Carrefour have issued statements to oppose Tibet independence and
support the Beijing Olympics, an MOC official said.
“We welcomed these actions,” the official said in a statement. “We hope
foreign-funded companies, including Carrefour, can do their utmost to
provide quality services for Chinese consumers,” the official said.
Carrefour, which entered China’s market in 1995, employed more than
40,000 local workers, accounting for 99 percent of all its staff at its
Chinese outlets, the official said.
The retail giant has 112 stores on the Chinese mainland. It also has
annual sales of nearly 30 billion yuan in China, 95percent of the sales
coming from made-in-China products, the official added.
Carrefour has been accused by Chinese Internet users of supporting the
Dalai Lama group, which Carrefour China denied in a statement on
Wednesday. In response also to protests in Paris and elsewhere in Europe
against the Olympic torch relay, Chinese protesters took to the streets
of several cities last weekend, calling for a boycott of Carrefour.
Chinese protestors chanted slogans, including “Oppose Tibet
independence” and “Oppose CNN’s anti-China statements”, expressing
indignation over western media’s biased reports over Chinese
government’s handling of the unrest in Tibet last month.
Many newspapers and Internet portals, including the “anti-cnn” website
and the People’s Daily, have published statements calling for rational
expressions of patriotism.
French Senate President Christian Poncelet conveyed on Monday in
Shanghai President Nicolas Sarkozy’s sympathy note to Jin Jing, a
wheelchair-bound fencer who struggled with a protestor over possession
of the Olympic torch during the relay in Paris.
“I understand that the Chinese people’s feelings were hurt by what went
on that day, and especially by the intolerable attack you suffered and
which I condemn with the utmost force,” Poncelet read from President
Sarkozy’s letter.
“What happened in Paris on April 7 has engendered a feeling of
bitterness in your country. I want to assure you that the incidents that
were brought about by a few people on this sad day don’t reflect the
feelings of my fellow countrymen for the Chinese people,” the letter
says
.—Xinhua |