Michelle Obama's gentle swipe at human rights in China

During Michelle Obama's conversation with students at Peking University, the first lady emphasized the need for the free flow of ideas – something China has been widely criticized for restricting.

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Alexander F. Yuan/AP
From left to right, US first lady Michelle Obama and her daughters Malia and Sasha applaud a Peking opera performance, surrounded by a group of American schoolchildren who are visiting China during their spring break, at the Summer Palace in Beijing, Saturday, March 22, 2014.

US first lady Michelle Obama told students in China, which has some of the world's tightest restrictions on the Internet, that freedom of speech and unfettered access to information make countries stronger and should be universal rights.

Mrs. Obama was speaking Saturday at Peking University in Beijing during a weeklong trip aimed at promoting educational exchanges between the US and China. The trip also took on political overtones when she was granted a previously unscheduled meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Friday.

Mrs. Obama said the free flow of information is crucial "because that's how we discover truth, that's how we learn what's really happening in our communities and our country and our world."

"And that's how we decide which values and ideas we think are best — by questioning and debating them vigorously, by listening to all sides of every argument and by judging for ourselves," she said.

China blocks many foreign news sites and social media services such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. Its army of censors routinely filters out information deemed offensive by the government and silences dissenting voices.

Though not likely to be well-received by the government, Mrs. Obama's remarks may not draw any strong protest because her speech and a subsequent moderated discussion among 50 students — sitting in two identical conference rooms in Beijing and Palo Alto, Calif., but connected via modern technology — focused mainly on the value of educational exchanges. She told the audience that study abroad programs are "a vital part of America's foreign policy."

Fulbright scholar Eleanor Goodman from Harvard University's Fairbanks Center for East Asian Research said the first lady probably "felt a need to make that statement" on freedom of information.

"It was firm but not overbearing," Goodman said.

Sunny Ni, a Chinese student studying environmentalism at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry, said that she has no problem accessing information for her studies, and that China is improving with free flow of information.

"It's a step-by-step process," Ni said.

Ni said Mrs. Obama impressed her by saying studying abroad should not be a privilege of the wealthy.

In her speech, the first lady said her husband has launched an initiative to send more American students with diverse backgrounds to China.

"Our hope is to build connections between people of all races and socio-economic backgrounds, because it is that diversity that truly will change the face of our relationships," Mrs. Obama said.

Ni said Mrs. Obama also appealed to her by saying people need to connect with each other to take on global challenges.

In a subsequent discussion, Mrs. Obama urged students to share their foreign experiences with their peers.

Mrs. Obama's meeting Friday with Xi, though not unexpected, was not originally part of the itinerary for her seven-day, three-city trip to China, and was a sign that the leaders of the world's two largest economies are seeking to build stronger personal bonds.

Xi said he cherished the "personal friendship" he has established with President Barack Obama, and the first lady thanked him for his hospitality.

The trip, the first time a U.S. president's wife has independently visited China, also has given Mrs. Obama an opportunity to engage with Xi's wife, Peng Liyuan, who has broken the mold of reticent Chinese first ladies in recent decades.

As a popular singer, Peng was better known than her husband before Xi was named Communist Party leader and president, and she has used her celebrity to promote AIDS awareness and other causes as China seeks to soften its international image.

Like Mrs. Obama, Peng is widely admired at home. Some Chinese grumbled when Mrs. Obama stayed in Washington last June while Peng accompanied her husband on a visit to California for a no-tie session with President Obama.

Mrs. Obama's goodwill trip to China has allowed her to make up for that absence and to bond personally with Peng in what has been dubbed as "first lady diplomacy."

On Friday, the two women met for the first time, as Peng accompanied Mrs. Obama on a school tour and walked her through the former Imperial Palace before the brief meeting with Xi and a private dinner, which Xi did not attend.

At the school, Peng wrote a Chinese aphorism on virtue in calligraphy and presented it as a gift to Mrs. Obama.

"She is a very gracious lady who is very focused on education, as I am," Mrs. Obama said in a video posted to the White House's official website.

In a Saturday editorial in China's state-run Global Times newspaper, Zhang Taofu, a journalism professor at Fudan University, wrote that the "first lady diplomacy" is politics without discussion of politics.

"It's often seen as providing rare soft adjustments to the blunt political confrontations," Zhang wrote, noting the diplomacy between China and the United States is multidimensional.

Mrs. Obama, who is traveling with her two daughters and her mother, will visit the Great Wall outside Beijing on Sunday, and is due to fly Monday to Xi'an, home to the famed Terra Cotta Warriors Museum. She also will visit a panda breeding facility outside Chengdu in the southwest before departing for the United States on Wednesday.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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