Queen says Chinese officials were 'very rude' during Xi Jinping's state visit

‘Oh, bad luck,’ Queen tells police commander in charge of visit security, in off-guard moment caught on camera at Buckingham Palace garden party

Chinese president Xi Jinping with Queen Elizabeth II at a state banquet at Buckingham Palace in October 2015.
Chinese president Xi Jinping with Queen Elizabeth II at a state banquet at Buckingham Palace in October 2015. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

The “golden era” of UK-China relations appears to have lost some of its glitter after the Queen accused Chinese officials of being “very rude” to the British ambassador during president Xi Jinping’s first state visit to Britain last year.

During a garden party at Buckingham Palace on Tuesday, the Queen’s official cameraman filmed her discussing Xi’s trip with Metropolitan police commander Lucy D’Orsi.

When D’Orsi was introduced as the officer responsible for security during the visit, the Queen was heard to remark: “Oh, bad luck.”

Later, the Queen told her guest: “They were very rude to the ambassador” – referring to Barbara Woodward, Britain’s first female ambassador to China.

D’Orsi complained to the Queen that Xi’s visit had been “quite a testing time for me” and claimed that at one point Chinese officials “walked out” on both her and the British ambassador, telling her “that the trip was off”.

“Extraordinary,” the Queen replied.

“It’s very rude and very undiplomatic, I thought,” the police commander concluded.

Footage of the conversation, which was distributed to the media by Buckingham Palace, is unlikely to help advance the much vaunted “golden age” of UK-China relations that Xi’s state visit was supposed to help launch.

Speaking ahead of Xi’s arrival, Woodward, a China specialist who has worked in the UK foreign office for more than two decades, predicted a bright future for ties between the two nations.

“We are looking forward to a golden visit in a golden year that launches a golden decade,” she told reporters.

Xi toasted the upgraded friendship during a trip to a Buckinghamshire pub with the British prime minister, David Cameron, and said he had been “deeply impressed by the vitality of China-UK relations”.

Xi Jinping and David Cameron drink their pints of beer at a pub in Princess Risborough near Chequers in October 2015.
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Xi Jinping and David Cameron drink their pints of beer at a pub in Princess Risborough near Chequers in October 2015. Photograph: Andy Rain/AFP/Getty Images

However, talk of the “golden” era has faded in recent months, amid growing tension between Beijing and London on issues including China’s suspected abduction of a British bookseller from Hong Kong and China’s artificial island-building campaign in the South China Sea.

Last week China’s ambassador in London, Liu Xiaoming, accused the US and UK of “making trouble in the South China Sea” by opposing his country’s activities in the region. “These nations should desist from meddling and muddling,” Liu wrote, according to Xinhua, China’s official news agency.

The Queen’s comments about Xi’s visit are unlikely to go down well in Beijing. But they were less incendiary than those made by her son, Prince Charles, after Hong Kong’s return to Chinese control in 1997.

In a memo about the handover ceremony Prince Charles described the Communist party’s elderly leaders as a “group of appalling old waxworks” and mocked the “awful Soviet-style display” of goose-stepping Chinese soldiers at the event.

The British embassy in Beijing declined to comment on claims the ambassador had been mistreated by Chinese officials or provide details of the circumstances under which they supposedly “walked out” on Woodward.

The embassy also declined to comment on the impact the episode might have on the UK-China relationship.

A spokesperson for Buckingham Palace said: “The Chinese state visit was extremely successful and all parties worked closely to ensure it proceeded smoothly.”

Beijing made no immediate comment on the Queen’s claims.

Foreign diplomats who have met Xi Jinping, a man some call China’s most authoritarian leader since Mao Zedong, describe him as a charming and engaging personality.

But China’s diplomats have faced previous accusations of ungraceful behaviour.

In 2014 officials representing prime minister Li Keqiang were accused of threatening to cancel a three-day trip to Britain unless he was granted an audience with the Queen. The meeting was subsequently arranged.

“The Chinese are hard negotiators,” one government source told the Times.

Transcript

Lord Chamberlain: Can I present Commander Lucy D’Orsi, who was gold commander during the Chinese state visit.

Queen: Oh, bad luck.

Lord Chamberlain: And who was seriously, seriously undermined by the Chinese, but she managed to hold her own and remain in command. And her mother, Judith, who’s involved in child protection and social work.

Judith Copson: Yes, I’m very proud of my daughter.

Lord Chamberlain: You must tell your story.

D’Orsi: Yes, I was the gold commander, so I’m not sure whether you knew, but it was quite a testing time for me.

Queen: Yes, I did.

D’Orsi: It was … I think at the point that they walked out of Lancaster house and told me that the trip was off, that I felt …

Queen: They were very rude to the ambassador.

D’Orsi: They were, well, yes she was, Barbara [Woodward] was with me and they walked out on both of us.

Queen: Extraordinary.

Copson: I know, it’s unbelievable.

D’Orsi: It was very rude and very undiplomatic, I thought.