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Huang, who climbs mountains in his spare time and says he has been to the North and South Poles, said plans call for making the site part of a chain of exclusive wilderness resorts in China, the United States and elsewhere. "Nature there is very beautiful," Huang said. He showed reporters photos of the grassy, treeless site with snow-blanketed hills in the distance and of himself, smiling broadly, meeting Icelandic officials and visiting rural farmhouses during a visit there. Huang also rejected suggestions his project was part of a possible Chinese government effort to gain access to a deep-water harbor nearby. "If it involved politics or any other background (than tourism), I wouldn't go there," he said. Huang said he was not aware of the controversy in Iceland until he returned to Beijing after a trip to Tibet this week. "I found the whole world was looking for me," he said.
[Associated
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