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President Barack Obama will open his his maiden1 visit to China with a town hall style meeting on Monday with young people in Shanghai. 奥巴马总统将首次访问中国,并将于星期一在上海与年轻人举行一个市政厅会议式的谈话。 President Obama will take questions from students in Shanghai His arrival in China's largest city marks the latest stage of his eight-day Asian tour. During the trip President Obama has affirmed his commitment to strengthen ties with the region's superpower. Chinese state media outlets2 have asked the public to submit questions for Mr Obama in Shanghai. Many of the questions urge him to clarify any plans to meet the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan leader whom Beijing dismisses as a "separatist", Reuters news agency reported. The BBC's Chris Hogg in Shanghai says negotiations3 over how and where the town hall meeting will be broadcast have lasted more than two weeks, as events of this nature are sensitive in China. A spokesman for the US Embassy in Beijing told Reuters that the town hall meeting is likely to be broadcast only on local television channels, scuppering(沉没) US hopes that it would be shown nationwide on Chinese television. President Obama is due to meet Chinese President Hu Jintao in Beijing on Tuesday, where talks will cover economic imbalances, concerns over Iran and North Korea and the effort to tackle climate change. Mr Obama has also signalled that he will raise the subject of human rights concerns in Beijing, but has not mentioned specific concerns, such as Tibet. Speaking in Tokyo earlier in the week, Mr Obama said welcomed a strong China, adding that better US ties with Beijing did not mean a weakening of relations with US allies in the region. In an online survey on US-China relations, 80% of Chinese respondents said the United States did not want to see their country rise, the Chinese magazine Globe reported. 点击收听单词发音
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