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TIME: Almanac 1990s
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<text id=92TT2487>
<title>
Nov. 02, 1992: Mixed Hospitality
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
Nov. 02, 1992 Bill Clinton's Long March
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE WEEK, Page 16
WORLD
Mixed Hospitality
</hdr><body>
<p>Reforming China welcomes one visitor and snubs another
</p>
<p> To most East Asians, China ia their Greece and Rome: the great
fount from which their civilizations sprang. Today, as China
struggles to find new directions with the help of neighbors, it
still expects its due in homages -- even though two recent
visits to Beijing showed how hard it remains to reconcile the
past and present. Emperor Akihito, the first Japanese sovereign
ever to set foot in the Middle Kingdom, was constrained by
domestic politics to stop short of apologizing for Imperial
Japan's brutal 1931-45 occupation of much of China. Many Chinese
still painfully recall the period's atrocities, but Akihito, to
appease Japanese rightists who had protested his trip, could not
go to the extent of asking for national forgiveness.
</p>
<p> While Beijing accepted his declaration of "deeply
deploring" the war record, officials gave no such leeway to
Christopher Patten, Hong Kong's gutsy new British Governor. On
his first visit to China, Patten was snubbed by the top brass
and told curtly that his ideas for further democratizing Hong
Kong before the 1997 Chinese takeover were unacceptable. Beijing
threatened to annul such political reforms, even if Deng
Xiaoping's economic reforms are mainland gospel today. Chinese
reverence for the wisdom of age was clear when the 14th
Communist Party Congress's 2,000 delegates cheered the ultimate
appearance of Deng, 88. Tottering into the Great Hall of the
People, he congratulated the congress on its "great success" in
endorsing bolder economic liberalization -- an agenda that will
need Japan's and Hong Kong's help to succeed.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>