Bush Apologizes To Hu For Protester
Heckler Accuses Chinese Leader Of Religious Persecution During W.H. Ceremony
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Play CBS Video Video China's Pres. In Washington Chinese President Hu Jintao's White House visit was interrupted by a lone protester. As Jim Axelrod reports, when the two world leaders met later, there didn't seem to be any breakthroughs on Iran.
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Video Protester Disrupts Hu Visit Chinese President Hu Jintao was greeted by President Bush on the White House's south lawn, but a protester began shouting during the welcoming ceremonies. Claudia Coffey reports.
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Video Woman Heckles President Hu CBS News RAW: During Chinese President Hu Jintao's speech, a woman began screaming at him for several minutes before being escorted out by police.
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A Secret Service officer covers the mouth of a protester as she is escorted from the camera stand after she disrupted the speech of Chinese President Hu Jintao, on the South Lawn of the White House, Thursday, April 20, 2006, in Washington. (AP)
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President Bush and Chinese President Hu Jintao toast each other during a lunch in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, April 20, 2006. (AP)
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President Bush and Chinese President Hu Jintao, left, take part in a South Lawn arrival ceremony, Thursday, April 20, 2006, at the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)
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Chinese President Hu Jintao tries on a Boeing baseball cap while visiting the aircraft giant's plant in Everett, Washington, on April 19, 2006, days after China sealed a $5.2 billion deal to buy planes. (AP)
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Chinese President Hu Jintao, right, toasts with Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates, left, at the head table Tuesday, April 18, 2006 at Gates' home in the Seattle suburb of Medina, Wash. (AP)
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Photo Essay China's President Visits President Bush welcomes Chinese President Hu Jintao to the White House, but not without incident.
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Interactive Focus On China Explore the history, people and economy of China, the world’s most populous nation.
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Interactive Eye On The Economy In-depth features on U.S. markets, taxes, employment and the Federal Reserve.
The protester was waving a banner with the red and yellow colors used by Falun Gong, a banned religious movement in China. She kept shouting for several minutes before Secret Service agents were able to make their way to her position at the top of the camera stand. They led her off the stand.
A photographer who was standing next to the protester tried momentarily to quiet her by putting his hand in front of her mouth.
"It's hugely embarrassing," said Derek Mitchell, a former Asia adviser at the Pentagon and now an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
China "must know that this Bush administration is good at controlling crowds for themselves, and the fact that they couldn't control this is going to play to their worst fears and suspicions about the United States, into mistrust about American intentions toward China."
A spokesman for the Chinese Embassy said he was too busy to talk when contacted for comment on the heckling.
Gregory, the spokesman for the Falun Gong-affiliated newspaper, said, "We expected her to act as a reporter; we didn't expect her to protest. None of us had any idea that Dr. Wang was planning this."
Meanwhile, no breakthroughs occurred during Hu's first visit to the White House as the president of China. And both he and Mr. Bush acknowledged at a picture-taking session that much work remained to be done and that the two sides would strive for progress in these areas.
Hu, aware of the growing U.S. impatience with America's record $202 billion trade deficit with China, offered general promises to address the yawning gap. But his comments were likely to do little to cool calls in Congress for punitive tariffs on Chinese products.
"We have taken measures and will continue to take steps to resolve the issue," he said.
Mr. Bush put a good face on the meeting.
"He recognizes that a trade deficit with the United States is substantial and it is unsustainable," the president said of Hu. "Obviously the Chinese government takes the currency issue seriously, and so do I."
A Bush aide put things more plainly to CBS News: "We have substantial issues with the regime."
Mr. Bush also had been hoping to get Beijing to take on more than a mediator's role in efforts to bring North Korea back to six-nation talks aimed at halting its nuclear weapons program. Asked what more his country could do to resolve the dispute, Hu said that China "has always been making constructive efforts to de-nuclearize the Korean peninsula."
The two presidents had not been expected to take questions. But an agreement to take questions from two reporters from each country came at the last minute and produced more than a half-hour of back-and-forth as the leaders sat in front of a fireplace.
©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




