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Prince William takes on diplomatic role in China

WATCH ABOVE: Prince William was in China Monday – part of a two-nation tour of Asia – becoming the highest ranked royal family member to visit the mainland in 30 years. The Forbidden City was just one of many landmarks visited. Seth Doane reports.

BEIJING – Prince William presented China’s president with an invitation from the queen for him to visit Britain this year, as the prince on Monday began the first official trip to mainland China by a senior British royal in a generation.

President Xi Jinping told the prince that he thanked Queen Elizabeth II for the invitation. “I look forward to meeting her majesty and other British leaders during the visit and to jointly plan out the future of Sino-British relations,” Xi said during the meeting in the Great Hall of the People, the seat of China’s legislature. “The British royal family has great influence, not just in Britain but across the world.”

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The prince’s three-day trip to Beijing, Shanghai and southwest China near the border with Myanmar is testing his diplomatic mettle as the second in line to the throne.

He won’t be visiting Hong Kong, the former colony Britain handed back to China in 1997. It was the scene last year of weekslong pro-democracy protests, during which Beijing prevented a British parliamentary committee from travelling to Hong Kong to investigate political reform there, saying it did not want Britain interfering in its internal affairs.

William told Xi and the rest of the Chinese delegation, including Yang Jiechi, the government’s senior foreign policy adviser, and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, that he was looking forward to strengthening relations between the countries.

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“I’m particularly interested in the young people and seeing how the next generation develops and is aware of the world as it is,” he added.

Earlier Monday, Prince William told a boy he might be able to make his dream of singing opera in a palace come true as he met with young people from disadvantaged backgrounds.

He made the comment as he toured a traditional Beijing courtyard residence dating from the 1890s that has been restored and turned into a museum with help from charities related to his father, Prince Charles: the Prince of Wales’s China Foundation and The Prince’s Foundation for Building Communities.

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He spent most of his time chatting with representatives of charities helping children with hearing and visual impairments, whose parents are migrant workers or in prison, and some of the young people they work with.

Zhao Chen, 14, who is visually impaired and undergone six operations to his eyes, and wants to be a tenor, told the prince: “My dream is to go to your palace to sing opera.”

The prince replied: “Well, you have met the right man. We might be able to arrange something.”

Before he left, William was presented with a picture drawn by a 10-year-old of crops, lush vegetation and bright pink, red and blue buildings.

“That will look nice in George’s bedroom,” he said, referring to his 1-year-old son.

Prince William also had a stroll in the Forbidden City, where emperors once resided, and had a meeting with Vice-President Li Yuanchao, after which culture officials from both countries signed an agreement marking the start of a year of cultural exchange between Britain and China.

The prince opened an exhibition in Shanghai on Monday evening that showcases British innovation in entertainment, design, health care and fashion.

He met with Chinese business leaders there, including Jack Ma, an English teacher-turned-founder of e-commerce giant Alibaba, which raised $25 billion in its initial public offering last year.

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His final stop in China is Xishuangbanna in Yunnan where he will visit an elephant sanctuary and a nature reserve on Wednesday.

William arrived in Beijing late Sunday after a four-day stay in Japan. Interest in his visit among Chinese was limited without the presence of wife Kate, who is expecting their second child next month. Xi offered the couple his congratulations.

Relations between Britain and China got back on track after Beijing suspended high-level diplomatic contacts for 14 months after Prime Minister David Cameron met with the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, in May 2012.

In June last year, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang’s visit to Britain was marked with pomp and ceremony, involving a meeting with the queen and the announcement of 14 billion pounds ($24 billion) worth of business deals.

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