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Selfie Diplomacy: India Leader Snaps Pic With China P.M.

India Prime Minister Narendra Modi takes time out for a selfie with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang at Temple of Heaven Park in Beijing.
India Prime Minister Narendra Modi takes time out for a selfie with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang at Temple of Heaven Park in Beijing, May 15.
India Prime Minister Narendra Modi takes time out for a selfie with Chinese Premier Li Keqiang at Temple of Heaven Park in Beijing, May 15.Narendra Modi / via Twitter

BEIJING — In a rare show of everyman charm from one of China's most elite politicians, Premier Li Keqiang appeared in a grinning selfie with visiting Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday.

Modi, who is visiting China this week to boost economic ties and discuss a persistent border dispute, is known for being at ease with social media, including a large follower base on Twitter.

But such spontaneous displays online are rare for leaders in China, where discussion of politicians' personal lives is taboo and details such as their exact birthdays are considered a state secret.

The selfie, which shows the leaders at a historical site smiling shoulder to shoulder, with Li squinting slightly in the sunlight, was posted on Modi's Chinese microblog account.

He spent the day in talks with Li during his three-day trip and is set to travel to the economic powerhouse of Shanghai on Saturday.

Modi set up an account on the microblogging site Weibo, China's answer to Twitter, ahead of his trip, prompting a flurry of mostly skeptical messages from the Chinese public.

China's leadership has experimented with more unscripted interactions in recent years. President Xi Jinping surprised residents near a popular Beijing shopping street when he took a stroll there last February.

He also astonished customers at a modest steamed bun shop by turning up, paying for his own food and making small talk with other patrons.

Many Weibo users reacted with delight to the two leaders' selfie, with messages like "cute premier!"

Others wondered why China's own leaders had no social media presence.

"Wouldn't it be great if Premier Li had his own Weibo?" one user wrote. "Then we could respond to him directly."

—Reuters