The Tibetan flag was hung on City Hall Flagpole before the Chinese Premier arrived.
Zhu's plane landed in a shroud of thick fog in Saint John's Wednesday night. It was the beginning of a six-day, six-city Canadian tour that will emphasize trade and environmental issues.
The premier arrived in Canada after wrapping up a nine-day visit to the United States.
About 120 Chinese , many of them school-age children or students at Memorial University, also turned out to wave Chinese and Canadian flags and shout greetings. A banner read ``Warmly welcome Premier Zhu Rongji to visit Canada.''
Rowan said the Chinese concerns were passed on to provincial officials just the same.
`` Some people believe that human rights is not just a western custom.''
He also said Calgary, Alberta Mayor Al Duerr's decision to present a white cowboy hat, Calgary's symbol of hospitality, to Zhu was "shameful" and "unacceptable."
Duerr shrugged off the criticism.
"It's easy to throw stones when you're sitting on a rock," he said, adding the white hat has nothing to do with politics.
"When the white hat becomes a political symbol, we will stop giving it out."
Canadian activists, meanwhile, want Prime Minister Jean Chretien to speak out forcefully when the politically-powerful Zhu arrives in Ottawa, Ontario later today.
James Pilgram of the Canada-Tibet Committee said flying the Tibetan flag in Saint John's was meant to be a peaceful sign of protest.
After Tibet's failed 1959 uprising against the Chinese, the Dalai Lama and 120,000 followers fled their Himalayan homes for what has become a lifelong exile, mostly in India and Nepal.
There are smaller Tibetan communities in Switzerland, the United States and Canada.
China effectively annexed Tibet after the revolt and declared it a Chinese province.
Several demonstrations cantering around the Tibet issue occurred during Zhu's U.S. visit.
During a protest earlier Wednesday in Cambridge, Massachusetts, a flag-waving pro-Chinese demonstrator was knocked down after he got close to a group of about 100 pro-Tibet protesters who were chanting ``Shame on China.''
The protesters grabbed the flag from the man and burned it.
He acknowledged some shortcomings, however.
"We wish to establish a nation which is ruled in accordance with law," he said.
"As for any individual case, I don't think this is the appropriate time to go into details."
Before leaving for Ottawa Thursday, Zhu met with Tobin and his cabinet.
Zhu will also visit Toronto, Ontario; Victoria and Vancouver, British Columbia; and Calgary, Alberta. 3. Who said the Chinese concerns were passed on to provincial officials just the same?
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