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China denies visa for former Norwegian prime minister to attend religious m

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BEIJING — China has denied a visa for a former Norwegian prime minister to attend a religious meeting, apparently still displeased over the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to a Chinese dissident more than two years ago.

Kjell Magne Bondevik, whose term in office ended in 2005, was to have been a moderator of the World Council of Churches meeting this week in Nanjing.

“We are disappointed and surprised that the visa ... was not approved,” its general secretary, Rev. Olav Fykse Tveit, said in a statement.

He said the Chinese government approved the meeting and knew Bondevik would moderate.

“This is very unfortunate for the work planned and undertaken by the commission,” he said.

The visa rejection was reported Tuesday by Aftenposten, the largest Norwegian newspaper.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded the 2010 prize to imprisoned dissident Liu Xiaobo and has repeatedly called for his freedom. He is serving an 11-year prison sentence for advocating democratic reforms and China has denounced his sympathizers as supporting a criminal.

The Nobel committee is independent of the Norwegian government, but that has not stopped China from canceling political meetings and purchases of Norwegian salmon.

Aftenposten quoted Bondevik as saying the Chinese Embassy in Oslo gave him no reason and reported he was the only one of the 30 delegates to the World Council of Churches meeting to be denied a visa for the meeting.

China’s Foreign Ministry did not respond directly to a question on Bondevik. It said in a faxed statement that Chinese are rejected for visas every day, that visa policies vary by country and that this case should not be “over interpreted.”

The Nanjing meeting is the first in China for the Geneva-based World Council of Churches and one of the meeting’s themes is was understanding China’s religious practices.

There was no immediate response from the China Christian Council in Shanghai, one of the hosts of the meeting.

China denies visa for former Norwegian prime minister to attend religious meeting - The Washington Post
 
Chini knee jerk reaction aside, Nobel peace prize unlike other Nobel prizes, isn't independent of Norwegian parliament. Norwegians parliament appoints the committee which grants Nobel peace prize which is sponsored by various multinationals.
 
Nobel prize for peace has lost its value after people like Kissinger can win one.
 
Nobel prize for peace has lost its value after people like Kissinger can win one.

Nobel peace prize reflects the western worldview, not American cosmopolitan, secular, free market worldview but orthodox European catholic worldview.
 
China is sending a strong signal to the rest of the world , we dont mess with your internal affairs and we dont really think you should mess with our either

More like making a mountain out of molehill. Any sane country would just ignore. But anyway China is known for making a scene out of everything and then not been able to put their buck where their mouth is.
 
China's Hu on landmark visit to Denmark

COPENHAGEN: Chinese President Hu Jintao comes to Denmark on Thursday for the first-ever state visit by a Chinese president to the Scandinavian country, the Danish prime minister's office said.

"President Hu is to be accompanied by a large delegation of ministers and other central Chinese decision-makers. The programme for the Chinese guests includes, among other issues, economic cooperation and sustainability," a statement said on Monday.

Hu will stay in Denmark, which currently holds the presidency of the European Union, until Saturday before attending the G20 summit in Los Cabos, Mexico on June 18-19.

Ties between Beijing and Copenhagen were strained in 2009 when the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, was received by then-prime minister Lars Loekke Rasmussen and foreign minister Per Stig Moeller during a visit to Denmark.

The welcome accorded to him in what was termed a private trip led to the cancellation of official Danish visits to China and caused problems for Danish firms operating in the country.

Denmark sent a diplomatic note to Beijing later that year to smooth things over, saying it would oppose Tibetan independence and carefully consider China's reaction before inviting the Dalai Lama again
.

The full details of Hu's visit have yet to be disclosed, but according to a preliminary programme he will attend a banquet hosted by Queen Margrethe II on Friday, and hold talks with the prime minister the following day.

Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt has told Danish media she plans to raise human rights issues and the situation in Tibet in her talks with Hu.


China's Hu on landmark visit to Denmark - Channel NewsAsia

Norway should learn from denmark
 
More like making a mountain out of molehill. Any sane country would just ignore. But anyway China is known for making a scene out of everything and then not been able to put their buck where their mouth is.

Look who is talking ? It is India who makes a mountain out of a molehill because even when it is an insignificant matter, India summons the foreign ambassador of that country.
 
Look who is talking ? It is India who makes a mountain out of a molehill because even when it is an insignificant matter, India summons the foreign ambassador of that country.

Are you a Chinese or is anyone in your family Chinese?
 
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