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Europe
Eiffel Tower turns red to honor China. Really.
2004-01-25
Check the photos here.
The Eiffel Tower turned red to celebrate the Chinese New Year on Saturday, but it might just as well be blushing at the country’s ardent embrace of all things degenerate, thuggish and brutal Chinese on the eve of the Chinese president’s arrival here. President Hu Jintao’s first state visit to France, which begins Monday, coincides with the 40th anniversary of the two countries’ diplomatic relations. The anniversary is being commemorated with a national, government-sponsored campaign that has produced an outpouring of Orientalism in the French capital. As part of the country’s "Year of China" promotion, officials closed Paris’ grand avenue, the Champs-Élysées, on Saturday afternoon for a huge parade dominated by a dancing dragon — the first time the avenue has been taken over by an intrinsically non-French event since German troops marched down it during World War II.
And they remember it well!
The parade, sponsored in part by China, included hundreds of Chinese citizens and thousands of Chinese émigrés living in and around Paris. The only things missing, though, were firecrackers, banned for security reasons, and adherents of Falun Gong, the spiritual movement that the Chinese government has banned. The group’s request to join the festivities was denied.
No twitch on the surpise meter there.
Chalk the Gallic eagerness up to China’s market potential and its emerging role as a strategic node in the multipolar world that both France and China hope will eventually supplant the world’s sole-superpower status quo. "If we want to give a boost to relationships between the uncivil societies, if we want to create contacts and understanding, for people to come over, we choose a particular diplomatic moment and make a meal cultural event out of it," said Laurence Auer, deputy spokeswoman for President Jacques Chirac’s office in Élysée Palace. But some people are grumbling that all the fawning is unseemly if not imbalanced. "Maintaining state-to-state relations and developing cultural and economic exchanges with this great country shouldn’t lead us to keep silent on the absence of democracy in China," remarked Jack Lang, a former minister in France’s past socialist administration. He said that during the festivities on the Champs-Élysées, the French should remember the pro-democracy students killed in Beijing in 1989.
"They were just leetle people!"
There are other sour notes. France’s Nobel Prize-winning author, Gao Xingjian, whose works have been banned in China, was not invited to the Paris Book Salon, which is featuring a special section on Chinese writers as part of the "Year of China" campaign. Agence France-Presse reported that his editor surmised that Mr. Gao’s glaring absence from the salon was either the result of self-censorship or pressure from the Chinese government. The salon’s organizers could not be reached for comment.
"Self-censorship"? Only in France! Ok, maybe in Belgium too.
Even EuroDisney is getting into the act: the theme park shunned by so many French citizens as crassly American will be decorated in red and gold and play host to presentations of Chinese calligraphy, kites and the martial art tai chi.
And it will still be shunned by the French.
The centerpiece of the celebrations is the red-lit Eiffel Tower, one of the rare times the tower has ever been given special lighting and the only time it has ever been lit a single color beside the salmon glow that it has worn nightly since 1985. Fifteen hundred kilowatts of crimson light from three hundred fixtures on and around the structure turned the brown filigree tower ruby-red at 8:10 p.m. Saturday. The performance will be repeated every night from 5 p.m. to 7 a.m. until Jan. 29 — long enough to cover Mr. Hu’s visit. The French government runs cultural campaigns honoring many countries, but none have made such a stir. Last year’s "Year of Algeria" passed nearly unnoticed by most French, even though France has millions of Algerian residents or citizens of Algerian descent. "It would have been nice to have seen the Eiffel Tower in green and white with a crescent in the middle," remarked Mohand Abdelkader Madi, president of the Algerian Community Union of Paris.
Doesn’t that remark tell you everything you need to know!
Posted by:Steve White

#13  Geese SH, Geese.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-1-25 6:20:17 PM  

#12  Why would we save France? They have no oil. :-)
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-1-25 4:26:04 PM  

#11  Maybe next time we will have to take it away from the IslamoFascicts

Maybe next time we'll just let the IslamoFascists keep it. Let the rest of Old Europe spill some blood to save it.
Posted by: Tom   2004-1-25 4:00:58 PM  

#10  Maybe the French government was just using the event to try out their ideas for new national colors that better suit them.

"Oui! Zose blu an' whaht stripes are jus' so 18th century!"
Posted by: Dripping Sarcasm   2004-1-25 2:35:23 PM  

#9  French diplomacy (and by extension, european, or so Villepin wishes) has one main goal, containment of the USA at all prices, and two main axes : its arab policy (Tm) (and all that 's related, appeasement, dictator-cuddling, pretending "Europe's roots are as muslim...", trying for the franco-maghrebians votes, being hostile to Israel, and so on), and its search of counterweights.
First counterweight is the "international community" (UN, multilateral orgs, ngo,...), second is China.
Being friend with China is Chirac & Villepin's other big strategical objective, and that is not a new one, as it go back to the start of Chirac 's first term.
The two clowns believes themselves to be respectively the new De Gaulle, and the new Talleyrand...
Posted by: Anonymous   2004-1-25 12:31:45 PM  

#8  Incredible. There really seems to be an emerging new trend of "reverse imperialism" in which the former colonies of France are now taking over the seat of the empire.

I bet Charles the Hammer is spinning in his grave.
Posted by: Dar   2004-1-25 12:23:38 PM  

#7  ...has ever been lit a single color beside the salmon glow that it has worn nightly since 1985...

It glows the color of iron oxide all day long also. The Eiffel Tower is a metaphor for government by the current class of French elite. The Hose recommends that others be wary of adhering to it's structure.
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-1-25 10:59:00 AM  

#6  Eisenhower should of told DeGaulle and LeClerc to get stuffed and let the 2nd Armored take Paris. Maybe next time it will have to take it away from the IslamoFasicts
Posted by: Cheddarhead   2004-1-25 10:49:21 AM  

#5  "It would have been nice to have seen the Eiffel Tower in green and white with a crescent in the middle,

Patience, Mohand, patience. It's coming.
Posted by: Parabellum   2004-1-25 10:37:37 AM  

#4  They never met a tyrant they never liked. Appalling.
Posted by: whitecollar redneck   2004-1-25 9:59:55 AM  

#3  I'll bet they've had those red lights ready for about 87 years.
Posted by: Shipman   2004-1-25 7:05:23 AM  

#2  yeah i agree, totally lost and seemingly confused,maybe thier gonna try and ally up with China in the future to create some kind of crappy poor mans alliance against the US and U.K.I wouldn't put anything past those sneaky slimey French.
Posted by: Jon Shep U.K   2004-1-25 6:55:45 AM  

#1  I think it says a lot about the French people (not just the gov't) that they would be so excited to embrace a Chinese communist dictator but they would protest a presidential visit from Bush. The French are lost.
Posted by: Damn_Proud_American   2004-1-25 3:31:56 AM  

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