From the Los Angeles Times
Bill Clinton says his ties to Alibaba firm in China don't conflict
with Hillary Clinton campaign
He agrees with her and supports the Dalai
Lama, he says.
By Stephen Braun
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 15, 2008
WASHINGTON —
In brief comments on the campaign trail in Pennsylvania, former
President Clinton said that his fundraising relationship with a Chinese
company involved in Internet censorship did not pose a potential
conflict of interest for his wife's presidential campaign.
Even
though the Chinese Web firm, Alibaba Inc., recently carried a
government-issued Internet "wanted notice" urging the arrest of Tibetan
protesters, he said that he backed Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's tough
words on China.
"I support the Dalai Lama and I support Hillary's position," he said in
remarks posted
online today by the New York Observer. He made the comments Sunday
during a campaign event for his wife in Bloomsburg, Pa.
In
recent weeks, Sen. Clinton has issued strong statements about mainland
China's crackdown in Tibet and urged President Bush to boycott the
opening of the Summer Olympics in Beijing. She has also called for a
"dialogue" between the Chinese government and the Dalai Lama.
But
her stance appears at odds with her husband's dealings with Alibaba and
his 2005 speech at an Internet forum in Hangzhou, China. A
Times article Sunday,1,254417.story
reported that Alibaba paid for some of his expenses and donated an
unspecified amount to his foundation after the speech.
Alibaba
has been accused by human rights groups of cooperating with Chinese
officials in their scrutiny of mainland Internet users.
Bill
Clinton said Sunday that his foundation's 2005 donation from Alibaba
played a role in his efforts to battle the AIDS virus. "They help me
save lives in China," he said.
Tax filings for his AIDS
foundation in 2005 do not mention Alibaba or its donation. A foundation
spokeswoman said that Alibaba's 2005 contribution had gone to his main
foundation and not to his AIDS effort, which was later absorbed into
the foundation.
The former president has relied on Chinese connections for his
foundation and for lucrative speaking engagements.
In December 2004, according
to the Chicago Tribune,0,5935166.story,
he appeared at a New York launch party for Accoona, an Internet search
engine. Accoona later issued his foundation options for 200,000 shares
of its stock. Accoona's main partner in its Internet venture was the
China Daily Information Co., a subsidiary of China Daily, the Chinese
government-published English-language newspaper.
He also
visited mainland China at least four other times between 2001 and 2005,
reaping at least $1.25 million in speaking fees from Chinese groups.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times