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Eclipsed by the unfolding crisis in East Timor, and shrouded in a thick shield of security, Chinese President Jiang Zemin’s four day visit to Australia last month was hardly the public relations triumph the government had hoped for. |
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The Queen’s Birthday Long Weekend saw an incredible turn out in Sydney’s winter sunshine in support of freedom for Tibet through music. |
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When Chinese President Hu Jintao came to Australia in late 2003, ATC placed a full-page advertisement in The Australian newspaper, welcoming Hu to Australia and asking him to engage in a substantive dialogue with the Dalai Lama on the future of Tibet. |
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In February 2006, ATC took part in the No Luv 4 Google Campaign.
The campaign was organsied by Students for a Free Tibet and took place on a global scale in response to Google’s new web search platform - Google.cn - filtering search results according to criteria set by the Chinese government. |
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See some of the media coverage of Sino’s withdrawal.
As noted last week Sino Gold’s announcement of the pull out from Tibet was buried at the back of their most recent quarterly report. Nevertheless the news was covered by some mainstream media including the Radio Australia and SBS Radio News in Australia, the BBC in the UK and Business Report in South Africa, home to major Sino Gold shareholder and joint venture partner Gold Fields. Mining industry information web sites also covered the news. |
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