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French Companies Get $22B From China

French companies will sell uranium, Airbus planes and technology worth $22.8 billion to China in deals announced during a pomp-filled visit by China's president.

PARIS (AP) -- French companies will sell uranium, Airbus planes and technology worth euro16 billion ($22.8 billion) to China in deals announced during a pomp-filled visit by the Asian country's president designed to smooth relations between the two nations.

As Hu Jintao and President Nicolas Sarkozy looked on Thursday, business leaders signed deal after deal including an agreement by Chinese companies to buy 102 aircraft from European plane-making consortium Airbus.

The three-day state visit by Hu started Thursday with a red carpet welcome at the airport, Chinese flags fluttering in the streets of Paris and a state dinner at the Elysee Palace.

It marks a dramatic turnaround from the tense relations of two years ago, when Sarkozy threatened to boycott the opening ceremony of the Beijing Olympics out of anger about China's treatment of Tibet.

That stance brought fears that France could lose big business in China, and Sarkozy's tone has changed. To the distress of human rights groups, Sarkozy's advisers say he is avoiding confrontation and going for convergence.

References to human rights have been subtle.

In a toast at a dinner table covered with gold ornaments and Champagne glasses, Sarkozy praised China's staggering recent development, adding: "The world is confidently waiting for (China) to take on all the responsibilities that accompany its rediscovered power."

Sarkozy believes China's support is essential as France takes the leadership of the Group of 20 major global economies starting Nov. 12. Sarkozy has ambitious goals, saying France will push for reform of the international monetary system and mechanisms to limit swings in commodity prices.

Business interests are central to the visit. The Airbus deal alone -- which will see airlines including Air China, China Eastern and China Southern buy the European consortium's A320, A330 and A350 models -- is worth around $14 billion.

Other deals included an agreement for France's Areva nuclear engineering firm to sell China Guangdong Nuclear Power Corp. 20,000 tons of uranium over a decade. The contract is worth around $3.5 billion dollars.

France's Total SA oil giant and China Power Investment Corp. vowed to cooperate on transforming coal into olefins, a chemical used in the plastics industry. Sarkozy's office said all the deals inked over the visit would total euro16 billion.

Cooperation is cultural as well: Paris' Louvre Museum and Beijing's Forbidden City agreed to work together on temporary exhibits and to share conservation and restoration techniques.

Sarkozy and French first lady Carla Bruni-Sarkozy greeted Hu at the airport on his arrival, an honor the French president rarely grants visitors. Their motorcade rolled down the famous Champs-Elysees avenue, where French and Chinese flags few from lampposts.

At the presidential palace, guards in silver helmets and on horseback awaited Hu as he arrived.

Meanwhile, Reporters Without Borders released doves from cages to press for the liberation of jailed Chinese dissidents. At another demonstration to support Tibet, the Uighur minority and the banned Falun Gong spiritual group, one demonstrator held a sign reading "Welcome, dictator."

Many observers have complained that Sarkozy said nothing last month when jailed Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo won the Nobel Peace Prize. Sarkozy's office says he will discuss all subjects "without taboos" during the visit.

Asked about human rights, China's Vice Foreign Minister Fu Ying told French reporters: "We don't criticize your political system, it's up to you to improve it. Our regime has its own problems. We're not perfect. That's why we are going forward with reform."

On Friday, the two leaders head to the French Riviera city of Nice for more talks and dinner at a cozy Provencal restaurant. Hu departs Saturday for Portugal.

Sarkozy has often flip-flopped on China. Despite his boycott threat, he did back down and attend the Olympic opening ceremony.

Sarkozy again angered China by meeting the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, in Poland in late 2008. After that the two countries' high-level contacts were frozen, and France was snubbed during major Chinese purchasing and investment missions to Europe.

The two countries reconciled with a fence-mending agreement last year. Sarkozy's conservative UMP party even signed a cooperation agreement with China's ruling Communist Party -- a move that raised eyebrows in France.

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