Heath hails Deng as brilliant leader (China Daily) Updated: 2004-08-21 13:20
Deng Xiaoping was a brilliant leader in the shaping of modern China, recalled
former British Prime Minister Edward Heath, adding that he had enjoyed a
"special friendship" with Deng for more than two decades.
"To the world as a whole, he (Deng) showed how a country can be handled to
garner rapid expansion, and how it can make its contribution to the whole world
in return," the 88-year-old Heath said in a recent interview with Xinhua at his
home in Salisbury, southern England.
Heath visited China 26 times in 27 years starting in May 1974, about two
months after his four-year premiership came to an end.
It was his government that established full diplomatic relations with China
in 1972 and Deng happened to be the first significant Chinese leader he
encountered in China.
Heath recalled, "I met Deng Xiaoping for the first time in 1974, when he came
to meet me at the airport. He led me along the three lines of cheering people
who came to greet me. At that time I told him thank you for looking after me."
"Then I got to see more of him when he occupied the position of a deputy
leader (vice-premier) and we saw a great deal of each other... The last time I
met him was just before he retired," he continued, adding that he could not
count how many times he met the late Chinese leader in total because there were
so many such meetings.
"Every meeting with him was interesting for me. I think also often for him
too," Heath said with a smile.
"I did regard the friendship between Deng Xiaoping and myself as special," he
said, noting that Deng always arranged for him to stay in the same guest house
he had lived in during his first visit to Beijing.
In the 1980s, his visits also played a key role in the Sino-UK negotiations
on China's resumption of sovereignty over Hong Kong, scholars say.
Remarkably, it was during the talks with Heath in Beijing in April 1982 that
Deng outlined overall principles on how to solve the Hong Kong issue, giving
vital impetus to the tough negotiations between the two countries.
The basis of "one country, two systems," proposed by Deng, "is entirely new,
and was created specifically to address Hong Kong's needs. I believe it can work
successfully," Heath said.
"The safe and peaceful return of Hong Kong to China in 1997 was a historic
and moving event," which was the best outcome for China, Britain, Hong Kong and
for the whole world as well, Heath added.
Heath said that throughout all their meetings and mail exchanges, Deng made
an outstanding impression on him.
"His personality was quiet, but also intensive. When thoughts occurred to him
he explained them immediately. He never hesitated and that made a big
impression," Heath mused.
"And he did have a greater vision of China, a very broad vision, also of its
relations with other countries" when he introduced reforms and opening-up
policies in 1978, Heath said.
Deng "had a rather wise, brilliantly extensive knowledge of his country's
affairs and the major world's affairs which affected China. He knew them, he
knew all about them and understood them intensively," he went on.
In his memoir published in 1998, Heath said, "I enjoyed our discussions, and
found Deng Xiaoping to be open and straightforward in his arguments. He always
seemed receptive to what I told him, prepared to give a direct answer to a
direct question, and also loved to spice our discussions with humour."
"Deng obviously kept his long-term objectives clearly in mind and had thought
deeply about how to achieve them. His stamina was remarkable, and his staying
power was proven time and time again," he wrote.
Heath has now personally met with three generations of Chinese leaders.
He had two long talks with Mao Zedong respectively in 1974 and 1975, a large
number of meetings with Deng in more than two decades, and also met the then
Chinese President Jiang Zemin in 1995.
Thanks to the reforms begun by Deng and carried on by his successors, China
has been undergoing "absolutely astonishing" transformation and is booming. It
also exerts greater influence on international affairs, Heath said.
The current Chinese leadership "is following Deng's ideas
but also takes opportunities to go further," Heath observed.
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