
The 2008 Olympic Torch in London
The
2008 Summer Olympics torch relay was run from
March 24 until August 8, 2008, prior to the
2008 Summer Olympics, with the theme of
"one world, one dream". Plans for the relay were announced on April
26, 2007, in Beijing, China. The relay, also called by the
organizers as the "Journey of Harmony", lasted 129 days and carry
the torch — the longest distance of any Olympic torch relay since
the tradition was started ahead of the
1936 Summer Olympics.
After
being lit at the birthplace of the Olympic
Games in Olympia,
Greece
on March 24, the torch traveled to the Panathinaiko
Stadium
in Athens
, and then to
Beijing, arriving on March 31. From Beijing, the torch was
following a route passing through six
continents. The torch has visited cities along
the
Silk Road, symbolizing ancient links
between China and the rest of the world.
The relay also
included an ascent with the flame to the top of Mount Everest
on the border of Nepal
and Tibet, China from the Chinese side,
which was closed specially for the event.
In many
cities along the route, the torch relay was met by protesters representing a range of political
issues, particularly those related to China's human
rights record, the recent unrest
in Tibet, the war in Darfur,
China's support to or commercial activity with governments in
Myanmar
and Zimbabwe
, North Korean defectors, territorial
disputes over the Spratly
and Paracel Islands
with Vietnam
, Falun Gong persecution and the political status of Taiwan,
resulting in confrontations at a few of the relay locations.
These
protests, which ranged from hundreds of people in San Francisco
, to effectively none in Pyongyang
, have forced the path of the torch relay to be
changed or shortened on a number of occasions. The
torch was extinguished
by Chinese security officials several times during the Paris leg
for security reasons. In the front of the city hall of Paris, the
Chinese security officials extinguished the torch in order to
protest against the flag from RSF: an image of Olympic symbols in
five handcuffs. The flag was hanging on a window of the city hall.
US-China Today has an interactive map
with photos and summaries of events at each international
stop.
The
attacks on the torch in London and Paris were described as
"despicable" by the Chinese
government and most Chinese people, condemning them as
"deliberate disruptions... who gave no thought to the Olympic
spirit or the laws of Britain
and France
" and who
"tarnish the lofty Olympic spirit", and vowed they would continue
with the relay and not allow the protests to "impede the Olympic
spirit". Large-scale counter-protests by
overseas Chinese and foreign-based Chinese
nationals became prevalent in later
segments of the relay.
In San Francisco, the number of supporters
were much more than the number of protesters, and in Australia, Japan
, South Korea
, the counter-protesters overwhelmed the
protesters. A couple of skirmishes between the protesters
and supporters were reported. No major protests were visible in the
Latin America,
Africa, and Western Asia legs of the torch
relay.
Prompted
by the chaotic torch relays in Western Europe and North America,
the president of the International Olympic
Committee
, Jacques Rogge
described the situation as a "crisis" for the
organization and stated that any athletes displaying Tibetan flags at Olympic venues could be
expelled from the games. though he stopped short of cancelling the
relay altogether despite calls to do so by some IOC members The
outcome of the relay will likely influence the IOC's decision on
whether or not to scrap global relays in future editions of the
games.
In June 2008, the Beijing Games' Organizing Committee announced
that the planned international torch relay for the
Paralympic Games had been cancelled.
The
Committee stated that the relay was being cancelled to enable the
Chinese government to "focus on the rescue and relief work"
following the Sichuan earthquake
.
Relay elements
Torch
The Olympic Torch is based on traditional scrolls and uses a
traditional Chinese design known as "Lucky Cloud". It is made from
aluminum. It is 72 centimetres high and weighs 985 grams. The torch
is designed to remain lit in 65
kilometre per hour (37 mile per
hour) winds, and in rain of up to 50 millimetres (2 inches)
per hour. An ignition key is used to ignite and extinguish the
flame. The torch is fueled by cans of
propane. Each can will light the torch for 15
minutes. It is designed by a team from
Lenovo Group. The Torch is designed in
reference to the traditional Chinese concept of the
5 elements that make up the entire universe.
Lanterns
The Olympic Flame is supposed to remain lit for the whole relay.
When the Torch is extinguished at night, on airplanes, in bad
weather, or during protests (such as the several occasions in
Paris), the Olympic Flame is kept alight in a set of 8 lanterns.
Aircraft
Internationally, the torch and its accompanying party travels in a
chartered
Air China Airbus A330 (registered B-6075), painted in the
red and yellow colors of the Olympic Games. Air China was chosen by
the Beijing Committees of the Olympic Game as the designated
Olympic torch carrier in March 2008 for its long-standing
participation in the Olympic cause. The plane will travel a total
of for a duration of 130 days through 21 countries and
regions.
Route
.png/180px-Beijing_2008_Torch_Relay_Route_(China).png)
2008 Torch Relay in China
The announced route will carry the torch through six continents
from March 2008 to May 2008 to August 2008.
The planned route
originally included a stop in Taipei
between
Ho Chi Minh
City
and Hong Kong, but there was disagreement in
Beijing and Taipei over language used to describe whether it was an
international or a domestic part of the route. While the Olympic
committees of China and Chinese Taipei reached initial consensus on
the approach, the government of the Republic of China
in Taiwan
intervened,
stating that this placement could be interpreted as placing
Taiwan
on the same
level as Hong Kong and Macau
, an
implication it objected to. The Beijing Organizing Committee
attempted to continue negotiation, but further disputes arose over
the flag or the
anthem of
the Republic of
China
along the 24 km torch route in Taiwan.
As of the midnight deadline for concluding the negotiation on
September 21, 2007, Taiwan and China were unable to come to terms
with the issue of the Torch Relay.
In the end, both sides of the Taiwan Strait
decided to eliminate the Taipei leg.
Sequence of events
International leg
: On
March 24, 2008, the Olympic Flame was
ignited at Olympia
, Greece,
site of the Ancient
Olympics. The actress Maria Nafpliotou, in the role of a High
Priestess, ignited the torch of the first torchbearer, a silver
medalist of the 2004 Summer
Olympics in taekwondo Alexandros Nikolaidis from Greece, who
handed the flame over to the second torchbearer, Olympic champion
in women's breaststroke Luo Xuejuan from China
.Following the recent unrest in Tibet, three members of
Reporters Without Borders,
including Robert Ménard, breached
security and attempted to disrupt a speech by Liu Qi, the head of
Beijing's Olympic organising committee during the torch lighting
ceremony in Olympia,
Greece
. The People's Republic of China called this
a "disgraceful" attempt to sabotage the Olympics. On March 30, 2008
in Athens, during ceremonies marking the handing over of the torch
from Greek officials to organizers of the Beijing games,
demonstrators shouted 'Free Tibet' and unfurled banners; some 10 of
the 15 protesters were taken into police detention. After the
hand-off, protests continued internationally, with particularly
violent confrontations with police in Nepal.
: In China, the torch was first welcomed by Chinese legal chief
Zhou Yongkang and State Councilor
Liu Yandong. It was subsequently passed
onto
Hu Jintao, the President. A call to
boycott French hypermart
Carrefour from
May 1 began spreading through mobile
text
messaging and online chat rooms amongst the Chinese over the
weekend from April 12, accusing the company's major shareholder,
the
LVMH Group, of donating funds to the
Dalai Lama. There were also calls to
extend the boycott to include French luxury goods and cosmetic
products. According to the
Washington Times on April 15, however,
the Chinese government was attempting to "calm the situation"
through censorship: "All comments posted on popular Internet forum
Sohu.com relating to a boycott of Carrefour
have been deleted."
Chinese protesters organized boycotts of the
French-owned retail chain Carrefour in
major Chinese cities including Kunming
, Hefei
and Wuhan
, accusing
the French nation of pro-secessionist
conspiracy and anti-Chinese
racism. Some burned
French flags,
some added
Nazism's
Swastika to the French flag, and spread short
online messages calling for large protests in front of French
consulates and embassy. The Carrefour boycott was met with
anti-boycott demonstrators who insisted on entering one of the
Carrefour stores in Kunming, only to be blocked by boycotters
wielding large
Chinese flags and hit
by water bottles.
The BBC reported that hundreds of people
demonstrated in Beijing, Wuhan, Hefei, Kunming and Qingdao
.
In response to the demonstrations, an editorial in the
People's Daily urged Chinese people to
"express [their] patriotic enthusiasm calmly and rationally, and
express patriotic aspiration in an orderly and legal manner".
: The first torchbearer in Almaty
, where the
Olympic torch arrived for the first time ever on April 2, was the
President of Kazakhstan
Nursultan
Nazarbaev. The route ran 20 km from Medeo
stadium to
Astana Square. There were
reports that Uighur activists were arrested and some were deported
back to China.
: The
torch relay leg in Istanbul
, held on April 3, started on Sultanahmet
Square
and finished in Taksim Square
. Uyghurs living
in Turkey protested at Chinese
treatment of their
compatriots living in
Xinjiang. Several protesters who tried to
disrupt the relay were promptly arrested by the police.
: On
April 5 the Olympic torch arrived at Saint Petersburg
, Russia. The length of the torch relay route in the
city was 20 km, with the start at the Victory
Square
and finish at the Palace Square
.
: The
torch relay leg held in London, the host city of the 2012 Summer Olympics, on April 6 began
at Wembley
Stadium
, passed through the City of London
, and eventually ended at O2
Arena
in the eastern part of the city. The
48 km (31 mi) leg took a total of seven and a half hours
to complete, and attracted protests by pro-Tibetan independence and
pro-Human Rights supporters, prompting changes to the planned route
and an unscheduled move onto a bus which then briefly halted by
protestors.
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith has officially complained to
Beijing Organising
Committee about the conduct of the tracksuit-clad Chinese
security guards. The Chinese officials, seen manhandling
protesters, were described by both the
Mayor of London Ken Livingstone and chairman of the
London Olympic
Committee Lord Coe as "thugs". A
Metropolitan police briefing
paper revealed that security for the torch relay cost £750,000 and
the participation of the Chinese security team had been agreed in
advance, despite the Mayor stating, "We did not know beforehand
these thugs were from the security services. Had I known so, we
would have said no."

Protesters at the torch relay through
London
Of the 80 torch-bearers in London, Sir
Steve Redgrave, who started the relay,
mentioned to the media that he had received e-mailed pleas to
boycott the event and could "see why they would like to make an
issue" of it.
Francesca Martinez
and
Richard Vaughan
refused to carry the torch, while
Konnie
Huq decided to carry it and also speak out against China. The
pro-Tibetan
MP
Norman Baker asked all bearers to
reconsider.
Amid pressure from both directions, Prime Minister Gordon Brown welcomed the torch outside
10 Downing
Street
without holding or touching it.The London
relay saw the torch surrounded by what the
BBC
described as "a mobile protective ring." Protests began as soon as
Redgrave started the event, leading to at least thirty-five
arrests. In Ladbroke Grove a demonstrator attempted to snatch the
torch from
Konnie Huq in a momentary
struggle, and in a separate incident, a fire extinguisher was set
off near the torch.
The Chinese ambassador carried the torch
through Chinatown
after an unpublicized change to the route amid
security concerns. The torch made an unscheduled move onto a
bus along Fleet
Street
amid security concerns and efforts to evade the
protesters.In an effort to counter the pro-Tibet protesters
and show their support for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, more than
2,000 Chinese also gathered on the torch route and demonstrated
with signs, banners and Chinese flags.
A large number of
supporters were concentrated in Trafalgar Square
, displaying the Olympic slogan "One World, One
Dream".
: The
torch relay leg in Paris, held on April 7, began on the first level
of the Eiffel
Tower
and finished at the Stade Charléty
. The relay was initially supposed to cover
28 km, but it was shortened at the demand of Chinese officials
following widespread protests by pro-Tibet and human rights
activists, who repeatedly attempted to disrupt, hinder or halt the
procession. A scheduled ceremony at the town hall was cancelled at
the request of the Chinese authorities, and, also at the request of
Chinese authorities, the torch finished the relay by bus instead of
being carried by athletes.Paris City officials had announced plans
to greet the Olympic flame with peaceful protest when the torch was
to reach the French capital.
The city government attached a banner
reading "Paris defends human rights throughout the world" to the
City
Hall
, in an attempt to promote values "of all humanity
and of human rights." Members from
Reporters Without Borders turned
out in large numbers to protest.
estimated 3,000 French police protected the Olympic torch relay as
it departed from the
Eiffel
Tower
and crisscrossed Paris amid threat of protests.
Widespread pro-Tibet protests, including an attempt by more than
one demonstrator to extinguish the flame with water or fire
extinguishers, prompted relay authorities to put out the flame five
times (according to the police authorities in Paris) and load the
torch onto a bus, at the demand of Chinese officials. This was
later denied by the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, despite
video footage broadcast by French television network
France 2 which showed Chinese flame attendants
extinguishing the torch. Backup flames are with the relay at all
times to relight the torch. French
judoka and
torchbearer
David Douillet expressed
his annoyance at the Chinese
flame
attendants who extinguished the torch which he was about to
hand over to
Teddy Riner: "I understand
they're afraid of everything, but this is just annoying. They
extinguished the flame despite the fact that there was no risk, and
they could see it and they knew it. I don't know why they did
it."
Chinese officials canceled the torch relay ceremony amidst
disruptions, including a Tibetan flag flown from a window in the
City Hall by Green Party officials.The third torchbearer in the
Paris leg,
Jin Jing, who was disabled and
carried the torch on a wheelchair, was assaulted several times by
unidentified protestors seemingly from the pro-Tibet independent
camp. In interviews, Jin Jing said that she was "tugged at,
scratched" and "kicked", but that she "did not feel the pain at the
time." She received praise from ethnic Chinese worldwide as "Angle
in Wheelchair". The Chinese government gave the comment that "the
Chinese respect France a lot" but "Paris [has slapped] its own
face."
The official of French government quickly visited her and showed
regret for what happened to her.
Reporters Without Borders
organised several symbolic protests, including scaling the Eiffel Tower
to hang a protest banner from it, and hanging an
identical banner from the Notre Dame cathedral
.
Several
hundred pro-Tibet protesters gathered at the Trocadéro
with banners and Tibetan flags, and remained there
for a peaceful protest, never approaching the torch relay
itself. Among them was
Jane
Birkin, who spoke to the media about the "lack of freedom of
speech" in China. Also present was Thupten Gyatso, President of the
French Tibetan community, who called upon pro-Tibet demonstrators
to "remain calm, non-violent, peaceful".
French members of Parliament and other French politicians also
organised a protest.
All political parties in Parliament—UMP, Socialists
, New Centre, Communists, Democratic Movement and
Greens—jointly requested a pause
in the National Assembly's session, which was granted, so that MPs
could step outside and unfurl a banner which read "Respect for
Human Rights in China". The coach containing the torch drove
past the National Assembly and the assembled protesting MPs, who
shouted "Freedom for Tibet!" several times as it passed.
French police were criticised for their handling of the events, and
notably for confiscating Tibetan flags from demonstrators. The
newspaper
Libération
commented: "The police did so much that only the Chinese were given
freedom of expression. The Tibetan flag was forbidden everywhere
except on the Trocadéro." Minister of the Interior
Michèle Alliot-Marie later stated
that the police had not been ordered to do so, and that they had
acted on their own initiative. A cameraman for
France 2 was struck in the face by a police
officer, knocked unconscious, and had to be sent to hospital.
: The
torch relay's North American leg occurred in San
Francisco, California
on April 9. On the day of the relay
officials diverted the torch run to an unannounced route.
The start
was at McCovey
Cove
, where Norman Bellingham of the U.S. Olympic Committee gave the
torch to the first torchbearer,
Chinese 1992 Olympic
champion swimmer Lin Li.
The planned closing
ceremony at Justin Herman Plaza
was cancelled and instead, a ceremony was held at
San Francisco International
Airport
, where the torch was to leave for Buenos Aires
. The route changes allowed the run to avoid
large numbers of China supporters and protesters against China. As
people found out there would be no closing ceremony at Justin
Herman Plaza, there were angry reactions. One demonstrator was
quoted as saying that the route changes were an effort to "thwart
any organized protest that had been planned."
San Francisco Board of
Supervisors President Aaron Peskin,
a critic of Mayor Gavin Newsom, said
that it was a "cynical plan to please the Bush State
Department
and the Chinese
government because of the incredible influence of
money." Newsom, on the other hand, said he felt it was in
"everyone's best interest" and that he believed people had been
"afforded the right to protest and support the torch" despite the
route changes.
Peter Ueberroth, head
of the
U.S. Olympic Committee, praised
the route changes, saying, "The city of San Francisco, from a
global perspective, will be applauded." People who saw the torch
were surprised and cheered as shown from live video of
CBS and
NBC. The cost to the city for
hosting the event was reported to be USD $726,400, nearly half of
which has been recovered by private fundraising. Mayor
Gavin Newsom said that "exponential" costs
associated with mass arrests were avoided by his decision to change
the route in consultation with police chief Heather Fong.
On April 1, 2008, the
San Francisco Board of
Supervisors approved a resolution addressing
human rights concerns when the Beijing Olympic
torch arrives in San Francisco on April 9. The resolution would
welcome the torch with "alarm and protest at the failure of China
to meet its past solemn promises to the international community,
including the citizens of San Francisco, to cease the egregious and
ongoing human rights abuses in China and occupied Tibet." On April
8, numerous protests were planned including one at the city's
United Nations Plaza led by actor
Richard
Gere and Archbishop
Desmond Tutu.

Protestors crowd the barrier gate
waving signs and flags as pro-Beijing and pro-Tibetian protestors
mingle.
Some
advocates for Tibet, Darfur
, and the
spiritual practice Falun Gong, planned to
protest the April 9 arrival of the torch in San Francisco.
China had already requested the torch route in San Francisco be
shortened.
On April 7, 2008, two days prior to the
actual torch relay, three activists carrying Tibetan flags scaled
the suspension cables of the Golden Gate Bridge
to unfurl two banners, one saying "One World, One
Dream. Free Tibet", and the other, "Free Tibet
'08".
Among them was San Francisco resident Laurel
Sutherlin, who spoke to the local TV station KPIX-CBS5
live from a cellphone, urging the International
Olympic Committee to ask China not to allow the torch to go through
Tibet. "Sutherlin said he was worried that the torch's
planned route through Tibet would lead to more arrests and Chinese
officials would use force to stifle dissent." The three activists
and five supporters face charges related to trespassing, conspiracy
and causing a public nuisance.
The torch
was lit at a park outside at AT&T Park
at about 1:17 p.m. PDT (20:17 UTC), briefly held aloft by
American and Chinese Olympic officials. The relay descended into
confusion as the first runner in the elaborately planned relay
disappeared into a warehouse on a waterfront pier where it stayed
for a half-an-hour. There were clashes between thousands of
pro-China demonstrators, many of whom said they were bused in by
the Chinese Consulate and other pro-China groups, and both
pro-Tibet and Darfur protesters. The non-Chinese demonstrators were
reported to have been swamped and trailed by angry crowds. Around
2 p.m. PDT (21:00 UTC), the torch resurfaced about two miles
(3 km) away from the stadium along
Van Ness Avenue, a heavily
trafficked thoroughfare that was not on official route plans.
Television reports showed the flame flanked by motorcycles and
uniformed police officers. Two torchbearers carried the flame
running slowly behind a truck and surrounded by Olympic security
guards.
During the torch relay, two torchbearers,
Andrew Michael who rides a wheelchair and
is the Vice President for Sustainable Development for the
Bay
Area
Council and Director of Partnerships For Change,
and an environmental advocate,
Majora Carter, managed to display
Tibetan flags in protest, resulting in their ejection from the
relay. The closing ceremony at Justin
Herman Plaza
was canceled due to the presence of large numbers
of protesters at the site. The torch run ended with a final stretch
through San Francisco's Marina district
and was then moved by bus to San
Francisco International Airport
for a makeshift closing ceremony at the terminal,
from which the free media was excluded. San Jose Mercury News described
the "deceiving" event as "a game of
Where's Waldo, played against the
landscape of a lovely city." International Olympic Committee
President Jacques Rogge said the San Francisco relay had
"fortunately" avoided much of the disruptions that marred the legs
in London and Paris, but "was, however, not the joyous party that
we had wished it to be."
: The
torch relay leg in Buenos Aires, Argentina
, held on April 11, began with an artistic show
at the Lola Mora amphitheatre in Costanera Sur. In the
end of the show the
mayor of
Buenos Aires Mauricio Macri gave
the torch to the first torchbearer,
Carlos Espínola.
The leg finished at
the Buenos Aires Riding Club in the Palermo
district
, the last torchbearer being Gabriela Sabatini. The 13.8 km
route included landmarks like the obelisk
and Plaza de Mayo
.The day was marked by several pro-Tibet
protests, which included a giant banner reading "Free Tibet", and
an alternative "
human rights torch" that was
lit by protesters and paraded along the route the flame was to
take. Most of these protests were peaceful in nature, and the torch
was not impeded. Chinese immigrants also turned out in support of
the Games, but only minor scuffles were reported between both
groups. Runners surrounded by rows of security carried the Olympic
flame past thousands of jubilant Argentines in the most
trouble-free torch relay in nearly a week. People showered the
parade route with confetti as banks, government offices and
businesses took an impromptu half-day holiday for the only
Latin American stop on the flame's
five-continent journey.
Argentine
activists told a news conference that they would
not try to snuff out the torch's flame as demonstrators had in
Paris and London. "I want to announce that we will not put
out the Olympic torch," said pro-Tibet activist Jorge Carcavallo.
"We'll be carrying out surprise actions throughout the city of
Buenos Aires, but all of these will be peaceful."
Among other
activities, protesters organized an alternative march that went
from the Obelisk
to the city hall, featuring their own "Human
Rights Torch." A giant banner reading "Free Tibet" was also
displayed on the torch route. According to a representative from
the
NGO 'Human Rights Torch Relay', their
objective was to "show the contradiction between the Olympic Games
and the presence of widespread human rights violations in China"
The torch in Buenos Aires
The outreach director of
HRTR, Susan Prager, is
also the communication director of "Friends of Falun Gong", a
quasi-government non-profit funded by fmr. Congressman Tom Lanto's
wife and Ambassador Mark Palmer of
NED. A major
setback to the event was caused by footballer Diego Maradona,
scheduled to open the relay through Buenos Aires, pulling out in an
attempt to avoid the Olympic controversy. Trying to avoid the
scenes that marred the relay in the UK, France and the US, the city
government designed a complex security operative to protect the
torch relay, involving 1200 police officers and 3000 other people,
including public employees and volunteers. Overall, the protests
were peaceful in nature, although there were a few incidents such
as the throwing of several water balloons in an attempt to
extinguish the Olympic flame, and minor scuffles between Olympic
protesters and supporters from Chinese immigrant communities.
:
Dar es
Salaam
was the torch's only stop in Africa, on April
13. The relay covered 5 km. The torch was lit by
Vice-President
Ali Mohamed Shein.
About a thousand people followed the relay, waving the
Olympic flag. The only noted instance of
protest was
Nobel Peace Prize
laureate Wangari
Maathai's withdrawal from the list of torchbearers, in protest
against human rights abuses in Tibet.
:
Muscat
was the
torch's only stop in the Middle East, on April 14. The relay
covered 20 km. No protests or incidents were reported.
: The
Olympic torch reached Islamabad
for the first time ever on April 16.
President
Pervez Musharraf and
Prime Minister
Yousaf Raza
Gillani spoke at the opening ceremony of the relay. Security
was high, for what one newspaper called the "most sensitive leg" of
the torch's Olympic journey.
The relay was initially supposed to carry
the torch around Islamabad, but the entire relay was cancelled due
to security concerns regarding "militant threats or anti-China
protests", and replaced by an indoors ceremony with the torch
carried around the track of Jinnah Stadium
.In fear of violent protests and bomb
attacks, the torch relay in Pakistan
took place in a stadium behind closed doors.
Although the relay was behind closed doors, thousands of policemen
and soldiers guarded the flame. As a consequence, no incidents
arose.
: Due to concerns about pro-Tibet protests, the relay through New
Delhi on April 17 was cut to just 2.3 km (less than
1.5 miles), which was shared amongst 70 runners.
It concluded at the
India
Gate
. The event was peaceful due to the public
not being allowed at the relay. A total of five intended
torchbearers -
Kiran Bedi,
Soha Ali Khan,
Sachin Tendulkar,
Bhaichung Bhutia and
Sunil Gavaskar- withdrew from the event,
citing "personal reasons", or, in Bhutia's case, explicitly wishing
to "stand by the people of Tibet and their struggle" and protest
against the PRC "crackdown" in Tibet. Indian national
football captain,
Baichung Bhutia refused to take part in the
Indian leg of the torch relay, citing concerns over Tibet.
Bhutia,
who is Sikkimese
, is the first athlete to refuse to run with the
torch. Indian
film star Aamir Khan states on his personal blog that the
"Olympic Games do not belong to China" and confirms taking part in
the torch relay "with a prayer in his heart for the people of
Tibet, and
... for all people across the world
who are victims of human rights violations".
Rahul Gandhi, son of the
Congress President Sonia Gandhi and scion of the
Nehru-Gandhi family, also refused to
carry the torch.
Wary of protests, the Indian authorities have decided to shorten
the route of the relay in New Delhi, and have given it the security
normally associated with
Republic Day
celebrations, which are considered
terrorist targets.Chinese intelligence's
expectations of points on the relay route that would be
particularly 'vulnerable' to protesters were presented to the
Indian ambassador to Beijing, Nirupama Sen. The Indian media
responded angrily to the news that the ambassador, a distinguished
lady diplomat, was summoned to the Foreign Ministry at 2 a.m. local
time; the news was later denied by anonymous sources in Delhi. The
Indian media reported that India's Commerce Minister,
Kamal Nath, cancelled an official trip to Beijing
in protest, though both Nath and Chinese sources have denied
it.
India strongly rejected Chinese demands, however, that the torch
route be "sanitised" of India's 150,000-strong Tibetan exile
community, by which they required a ban on congregation near the
curtailed 3 km route. In response Indian officials said India
was a democracy, and "a wholesale ban on protests was out of the
question".Contradicting some other reports, Indian officials also
refused permission to the "Olympic Holy Flame Protection Unit". The
combined effect is a "rapid deterioration" of relations between
India and China. Meanwhile, the
Tibetan government in exile,
which is based in India, has stated that it did not support the
disruption of the Olympic torch relay.
The noted Indian social activist and a retired Indian Police
Service (IPS) officer
Kiran Bedirefused
to participate saying "she doesn’t want to run in the event as
‘caged woman’." On April 15,
Bollywood
actress
Soha Ali Khan pulled out of
the Olympic torch relay, citing “very strong personal reasons”.On
April 16, a protest was organised in Delhi "against Chinese
repression in Tibet", and was broken up by the police.
: The
April 18 relay through Bangkok
was the Olympic flame's first visit to
Thailand. The relay covered just over 10 km, and
included Bangkok's Chinatown.
The torch was carried past Democracy
Monument
, Chitralada Palace
and a number of other city landmarks. M.R.
Narisa Chakrabongse, Green World
Foundation (GWF) chairwoman, withdrew from the torch-running
ceremony, protesting against China's actions in Tibet. Several
hundred protesters were present, along with Olympic supporters.Thai
authorities threatened to arrest foreign protesters and ban them
from future entry into Thailand. A coalition of Thai human rights
groups announced that it would organise a "small demonstration"
during the relay, and several hundred people did indeed take part
in protests, facing Beijing supporters. Intended torchbearer
Mom Rajawongse Narissara Chakrabongse boycotted the
relay, to protest against China's actions in Tibet. In Bangkok,
students told the media that the Chinese Embassy provided them with
transportation and gave them shirts to wear.
: The
event was held in the capital city, Kuala Lumpur
, on April 21. The 16.5 km
long-relay began from the historic Independence Square, passed in front of
several city landmarks before coming to an end at the iconic
Petronas
Twin Towers
. Among the landmarks the Olympic flame passed
next to were the Parliament House, National Mosque, KL
Tower
and Merdeka Stadium
. A team of 1000 personnel from the Malaysian
police Special Action Squad guarded the event and escorted the
torchbearers. The last time an Olympic torch relay was held in
Malaysia was
the 1964 Tokyo
edition.

A group of youths surrounded a
suspected Tibet supporter demonstrating during the torch relay in
Kuala Lumpur.
Just days before the relay supporters of
Falun Gong demonstrated in front of the Chinese
embassy in the Malaysian capital. As many as 1,000 personnel from
the special police unit were expected to be deployed on the day of
the relay. A Japanese family with Malaysian citizenship and their
5-year-old child who unfurled a Tibetan flag were hit by a group of
Chinese nationals with plastic air-filled batons and heckled by a
crowd of Chinese citizens during the confrontation at
Independence Square where the relay began,
and the Chinese group shouted: "Taiwan and Tibet belong to China."
Later during the day, the Chinese volunteers forcefully took away
placards from two other Malaysians protesting at the relay. One of
the protesting Malaysian was hit in the head.
: The
Olympic flame reached Jakarta
on April 22. The original 20 km relay
through Jakarta was cancelled due to "security worries", at the
request of the Chinese embassy, and the torch was instead carried
round the city main's stadium, as it had been in Islamabad. Several
dozen pro-Tibet protesters gathered near the stadium, and were
dispersed by the police.The event was held in the streets around
the city main's stadium. The cancelling of the relay through the
city itself was decided due to security concerns and at the request
of the Chinese embassy. Only invitees and journalists were admitted
inside the stadium. Protests took place outside the stadium.

Spectators holding Chinese flags
during the Canberra leg of the relay.
: The
event was held in Canberra, Australian Capital
Territory
on April 24, and covered around 16 km of
Canberra's central areas, from Reconciliation Place
to Commonwealth Park
. Upon its arrival in Canberra, the Olympic
flame was presented by Chinese officials to local
Aboriginal elder Agnes Shea, of the
Ngunnawal people. She, in turn,
offered them a message stick, as a gift of peace and welcome.
Hundreds of pro-Tibet protesters and thousands of Chinese students
reportedly attended. Demonstrators and counter-demonstrators were
kept apart by the
Australian
Federal Police. Preparations for the event were marred by a
disagreement over the role of the Chinese
flame attendants, with Australian and Chinese officials arguing
publicly over their function and prerogatives during a press
conference.
Following the events in Olympia, there were reports that China
requested permission to deploy
People's Liberation Army personnel
along the relay route to protect the flame in Canberra. Australian
authorities stated that such a request, if it were to be made,
would be refused. Chinese officials labeled it a rumor. Australian
police have been given powers to search relay spectators, following
a call by the Chinese Students and Scholars Association for Chinese
Australian students to "go defend our sacred torch" against "ethnic
degenerate scum and anti-China separatists". Tony Goh, chairman of
the Australian Council of Chinese Organisations, has said the ACCO
would be taking "thousands" of pro-Beijing demonstrators to
Canberra by bus, to support the torch relay. Zhang Rongan, a
Chinese Australian student organising pro-Beijing demonstrations,
told the press that Chinese diplomats were assisting with the
organization of buses, meals and accommodation for pro-Beijing
demonstrators, and helping them organise a "peaceful show of
strength". Foreign Minister
Stephen Smith said
Chinese officials were urging supporters to "turn up and put a
point of view", but that he had no objection to it as long as they
remained peaceful.

Chinese spectators holding signs in
Canberra.

Chinese protesters attacking lone
Tibetan in Canberra.
Intended torchbearer
Lin Hatfield
Dodds withdrew from the event, explaining that she wished to
express concern about China's human rights record. Foreign Minister
Stephen Smith said her decision was "a very good example of
peacefully making a point".
Up to 600 pro-Tibet protesters were expected to attend the relay,
along with between 2,000 and 10,000 Chinese supporters. Taking note
of the high number of Chinese supporters,
Ted Quinlan, head of the Canberra torch relay
committee, said: "We didn't expect this reaction from the Chinese
community. It is obviously a well-coordinated plan to take the day
by weight of numbers. But we have assurances that it will be done
peacefully.".
Also, Australia's ACT
Chief Minister, Jon
Stanhope confirmed that the Chinese embassy was closely involve
to ensure that "pro-China demonstrators vastly outnumbered Tibetan
activists." Australian freestyle swimmer and five-time
Olympic gold medalist
Ian Thorpe ended
the Australian leg of the torch relay April 24, 2008, touching the
flame to light a cauldron after a run that was only marginally
marked by protests. People demonstrated both for China and for
Tibet. At least five people were arrested during the torch relay.
Police said "the five were arrested for interfering with the event
under special powers enacted in the wake of massive protests
against Chinese policy toward Tibet." At one point, groups of
Chinese students surrounded and intimidated pro-Tibet protesters.
One person had to be pulled aboard a police launch when a group of
pro-Chinese students looked like they might force him into the
lake.
: The event was held in
Nagano, which hosted
the
1998 Winter Olympics, on
April 26.
Japanese Buddhist temple Zenkō-ji
, which was originally scheduled to be the starting
point for the Olympic torch relay in Nagano, refused to host the torch and pulled
out of the relay plans, amid speculation that monks there
sympathized with anti-Chinese government protesters. as well as the
risk of disruption by violent protests. Parts of Zenkō-ji
temple's main building (Zenkō-ji Hondō), reconstructed in 1707 and
one of the
National
Treasures of Japan, was then vandalized with spraypaint. A new
starting point, previously the site of a municipal building and now
a parking lot, was chosen by the city. An event the city had
planned to hold at the Minami Nagano Sports Park following the
torch relay was also canceled out of concern about disruptions
caused by demonstrators protesting against China's recent crackdown
in Tibet. Thousands of
riot police were
mobilized to protect the torch along its route. The show of force
kept most protesters in check, but slogans shouted by pro-China or
pro-Tibet demonstrators,
Japanese
nationalists, and human rights organizations flooded the air.
Five men were arrested and four injured amidst scenes of mob
violence. The torch route was packed with mostly peaceful
demonstrators. The public was not allowed at the parking lot where
the relay started. After the Zenkoji monks held a prayer ceremony
for victims of the recent events in Tibet. More than 100 police
officers ran with the torch and riot police lined the streets while
three helicopters flew above. Only two
Chinese
guards were allowed to accompany the torch because of Japan's
concern over their treatment of demonstrators at previous relays. A
man with a Tibetan flag tried to stop the torch at the beginning of
the relay but was dragged off by police. Some raw eggs were also
thrown from the crowd.
: The
event was held in Seoul
, which
hosted the 1988 Summer
Olympics, on April 27.Intended torchbearers Choi
Seung-kook and Park Won-sun boycotted the event to protest against
the Chinese government's crackdown in Tibet. More than 8,000 riot
police were deployed to guard the 15-mile route, which began at
Olympic Park, which was built when Seoul hosted the 1988 Summer
Games.
On
the day of the torch relay in Seoul
, Chinese
students clashed with protesters, throwing rocks, bottles, and
punches. A North
Korean defector whose brother defected to China but was
captured and executed by the DPRK
,
attempted to set himself on fire in
protest of China's treatment of North Korean refugees.
He poured gasoline on himself but police quickly surrounded him and
carried him away. Two other demonstrators tried to storm the torch
but failed. Fighting broke out near the beginning of the relay
between a group of 500 Chinese supporters and approximately 50
protesters who carried a banner that read: "Free North Korean
refugees in China." The students threw
stones and water bottles as approximately 2,500 police tried to
keep the groups separated. Police said they arrested five people,
including a Chinese student who was arrested for allegedly throwing
rocks. Thousands of Chinese followed the torch on its 4.5 hour
journey, some chanting, "Go China, go Olympics!" By the end of the
relay, Chinese students became violent, and it was reported in
Korean media that they were "lynching" everyone who was disagreeing
with them. One police man was also rushed to hospital after being
attacked by Chinese students. On Apr 29, the Secretary of Justice,
Kim Kyung Han, told the prime minister that he will find "every
single Chinese who was involved and bring them to justice." Later
in the day, South Korea's Prosecutor's Office, National Police
Agency,
Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and
National
Intelligence Service made a joint statement saying that they
will be deporting every Chinese student that was involved in the
incident.
: The
event was held in Pyongyang
on April 28. It was the first time that the Olympic
torch has traveled to North
Korea
. A crowd of thousands waving pink paper
flowers and small flags with the Beijing Olympics logo were
organized by the authoritarian regime watched the beginning of the
relay in Pyongyang, some waving Chinese flags. The event was
presided over by the head of the country's parliament,
Kim Yong Nam. The North, an ally of China, has
been critical of disruptions to the torch relay elsewhere and has
supported Beijing in its actions against protests in Tibet. Kim
passed the torch to the first runner
Pak Du
Ik, who played on North Korea's 1966 World Cup soccer team, as
he began the 12-mile route through Pyongyang.
The relay began from
the large sculpted flame of the obelisk of the Juche Tower
, which commemorates the national ideology of
"self-reliance" created by the country's late founding President
Kim Il Sung, father of current leader
Kim Jong Il, who did not
attend.
The
United Nations
Organization and its children's agency
UNICEF withdrew their staff, saying that it wasn't
sure the event would help its mission of raising awareness of
conditions for children and amid concerns that the relay would be
used as a propaganda stunt. "It was unconscionable," said a UN
official who was briefed on the arguments. North Korea is
frequently listed among the world’s worst offenders against human
rights.
: The
event was held in Ho Chi Minh City
on April 29. Some 60 torchbearers carried the torch
from the downtown Opera House to the
Military Zone 7 Competition Hall stadium near Tan Son Nhat
International Airport
along an undisclosed route. Vietnam is involved
in a territorial dispute with China (and other countries) for
sovereignty of the Spratly
and Paracel
Islands
; tensions have risen recently following reports
that the Chinese Government had established a county-level city
named Sansha
in the disputed territories, resulting in
anti-Chinese demonstrations in December 2007 in Hanoi and Ho Chi
Minh City. However to sustain its relationship with China
the Vietnamese government has actively sought to head off protests
during the torch relay, with Prime Minister
Nguyễn Tấn Dũng warning
government agencies that "hostile forces" may try to disrupt the
torch relay.
Prior to
the rally seven anti-China protestors were arrested in Hanoi
after
unfurling a banner and shouting "Boycott the Beijing Olympics"
through a loudhailer at a market. A
Vietnamese American was deported for
planning protests against the torch, while a prominent blogger Điếu
Cày (real name Nguyễn Văn Hải) who blogged about protests around
the world and who called for demonstrations in Vietnam was arrested
on charges of
tax evasion. Outside
Vietnam, there were protests by
overseas Vietnamese in Paris, San
Francisco and Canberra. Lê Minh Phiếu, a torchbearer who is a
Vietnamese law student studying in France wrote a letter to the
president of the International Olympic Committee protesting China's
"politicisation of the Olympics", citing maps of the torch relay at
the official Beijing Olympic website depicting the disputed islands
as Chinese territory and posted it on his blog.
One day before the
relay was to start, the official website appeared to have been
updated to remove the disputed islands and dotted lines marking
China's maritime claims in the South China Sea
.
Special Administrative Region leg
: The event was held in Hong Kong on May 2.
In the ceremony held
at the Hong Kong
Cultural Centre
in Tsim Sha
Tsui
, Chief
Executive Donald Tsang handed the
torch to the first torchbearer, Olympic medalist Lee Lai Shan. The torch relay then
traveled through Nathan
Road
, Lantau Link, Sha Tin
(crossed Shing Mun
River via a dragon boat, which had
been never used before in the history of Olympic torch relays),
Victoria
Harbour
(crossed by Tin Hau, a VIP vessel
managed by the Marine Department) before ending in Golden
Bauhinia Square
in Wan Chai.A
total of 120 torchbearers were selected to participate in the event
consisting of celebrities, athletes and pro-Beijing camp
politicians. No politicians from the
pro-democracy camp were selected as
torchbearers. One torchbearer could not participate due to flight
delay. It was estimated that more than 200,000 spectators came out
and watched the relay. Many enthusiastic supporters wore red shirts
and waved large
Chinese flags.
According to Hong Kong
Chief Secretary for
Administration Henry Tang, 3,000
police were deployed to ensure order.
There were several protests along the torch relay route. Members of
the
Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in
China, including pro-democracy activist
Szeto Wah, waved novelty
inflatable plastic Olympic flames, which they
said symbolised democracy.
They wanted accountability for the Tiananmen
Square protests of 1989
and the implementation of democracy in Hong Kong.
Political
activist and Legislative Council
member Leung
Kwok-hung also joined the protest, saying "I'm very proud that
in Hong Kong we still have people brave enough to speak
out." Pro-democracy activists were overwhelmed by a crowd of
torch supporters with insults like "running dog," "traitor," "get
out!," and "I love the
Communist Party." At the same time,
about 10 members of the
Civil
Human Rights Front had orange banners calling for human rights
improvements and
universal
suffrage. Onlookers were saying "Aren't you Chinese?" in
Mandarin putonghua as they tried to cover
the orange banners with a large Chinese national flag. One woman
had an orange sign that said, "Olympic flame for democracy", while
a man carried a poster with a tank and the slogan "One world, two
dreams". A university student and former RDHK radio host
Christina Chan wrapped the Tibetan
snow lion flag around her body and later began
waving it. Several onlookers heckled Chan, shouting "What kind of
Chinese are you?" and "What a shame!" In the end, she and some of
the protesters were taken away against their will by the
authorities via a police vehicle "for their own protection." Chan
is currently suing the Hong Kong government, claiming her human
rights were breched. (case number HCAL139/08)
The Color
Orange democracy group, led by Danish sculptor Jens Galschiøt, originally planned to
join the Hong Kong Alliance relay and paint the "Pillar of Shame," a structure he built in
Hong Kong to commemorate the 1989 Tiananmen
Square massacre
. However, Galschiøt and two other people
were denied entry to Hong Kong on April 26, 2008 due to
"immigration reasons" and were forced to leave Hong Kong. In
response,
Lee Cheuk Yan, vice chairman
of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic
Movements in China, said, "It's outrageous that the government is
willing to sacrifice the image of Hong Kong because of the torch
relay."
Hollywood
actress Mia Farrow was
also briefly questioned at the Hong Kong
airport
though officials allowed her to enter.
She later
gave a speech criticizing China's relations with Sudan
in Hong
Kong, as there was also a small minority of people protesting about
China's role in the crisis of Darfur. Legislator
Cheung Man Kwong have also said the
government's decision allowing Farrow to enter while denying others
is a
double standard and a violation
to Hong Kong's
one country, two
systems policy.
: The event was held in Macau on May 3. It was the first time that
the Olympic torch has traveled to Macau.
A ceremony was held
at Macau
Fisherman's Wharf
. Afterward, the torch traveled through Macau,
passing by a number of landmarks includes A-Ma Temple
, Macau
Tower
, Ponte Governador Nobre de
Carvalho, Ponte de Sai Van,
Macau Cultural Centre, Macau Stadium and then back to the
Fisherman's Wharf for the closing ceremony. Parts of the route
near Ruins of
St. Paul's
and Taipa
was
shortened due to large crowds of supporters blocking narrow
streets. A total of 120 torchbearers participated in this
event including casino tycoon
Stanley Ho.
Leong Hong Man and Leong Heng Teng were the first and last
torchbearer in the relay respectively. An article published on
Macao Daily News criticized that
the list of the torchbearers could not fully represent the
Macanese and that there were too many non-athletes
among the torchbearers. (some of whom had already been torchbearers
of other sporting events)
A union planned to protest at the relay for better living
conditions. Hong Kong legislator Michael Mak Kwok-fung and activist
Chan Cheong, both members of the
League of Social Democrats, were
not allowed to enter Macau.
A Macau resident was arrested on April 26 for posting a message on
cyberctm.com encouraging people to disrupt the relay. Both
orchidbbs.com and cyberctm.com internet forums were shutdown from
May 2 to 4. This fueled speculations that the shutdowns were
targeting speeches against the relay. Head of the Bureau of
Telecommunications Regulation has denied that the shutdown of the
websites were politically motivated. About 2,200 police were
deployed on the streets, there were no interruptions.
Domestic leg
: The torch returned to China for the first time since April.
The torch
arrived in Sanya
, Hainan
on May 4 with celebrations attended by
International Olympic Committee (IOC) officials and Chinese big
names like Jackie Chan. The
entire relay through
Mainland China
was largely a success with many people welcoming the arrival of the
torch along the way.
Some notable incidents are:
- During the Fujian
run, the relay carried a cross-strait theme since the province
is geographically across from Taiwan. The Beijing Organizing Committee
invited people from Taiwan
to witness
the torch relay, but the organisers offered no further
details.
- On May 8, a simultaneous run of the torch was done as part of the summit
on Mt. Everest.
- A
28-year old man in Jiangsu
known as "Tang" was arrested for spreading rumors
online he would go to Nanjing
(the May 27 leg) to grab the torch.
- The
last leg of the Fujian
run was gloomily shadowed by the May 12 Sichuan
earthquake
. As a result, the relay began on May 14 with
a moment of silence as the torch
made its way through the province of Jiangxi
. From May 19 through 21, the relay was
suspended as the State
Council designated these three days as national days of
mourning for the victims in the earthquake. The relay through the
province of Sichuan
was postponed.
- On May 23, the relay began in Shanghai. Tens of thousands
gathered at the famous People’s Square
and the
Bund
along the Huangpu River
to welcome the torch. It passed through
Pudong
, the crown-jewel of Shanghai’s districts and PRC’s
financial capital. The two-day Shanghai leg concluded in
Anting, an automobile hub in Shanghai’s suburbs, and home to the
city’s Formula One Shanghai
International Circuit
. There was no interruptions.
- On June 21, the relay began in the Tibet Autonomous Region. The
originally three-day run was cut short to only one day, likely due
to the controversy surrounding the relay because of China's harsh
response to the Lhasa riot and the other protests that swept the
Tibetan plateau between March and May, and also the delay to the
relay due to the devastating Sichuan earthquake. Xinhua, China's
official news agency, claimed that organizations such as the
Tibetan Youth Congress (TYC) and the Tibetan Women's Association
(TWA) threatened to "sabotage" the relay, but there is no evidence
to support this and it contradicts statements from the
organizations themselves. Meanwhile, the other Olympic flame
rejoined the Olympic flame used in the main torch relay route in
Tibet after ascending Mount Everest. Zhang Qingli, the Communist
Party Secretary in Tibet, drew criticism from the IOC who wrote to
BOCOG, saying that they "regret the political statements" made by
Zhang during the relay, after he claimed that they could "totally
smash the splittist schemes of the Dalai clique".
- On July 7, the torch was lit in Jiayuguan (the Western end of the Great Wall of China).
- On
August 3, the torch relay started in Sichuan
after a devastated earthquake that killed almost
70,000 people in May. Sichuan was the last stop before
returning to Beijing for the opening ceremony.
- On August 8, the torch reached Beijing for the opening ceremony.
After a
spectacular art show and the parade of nations, the flame entered
the stadium
. The Olympic torch was relayed by 7
torchbearers before it was passed on to former Olympic gymnast
Li Ning. Li, who was suspended by wires,
then appeared to run horizontally along the top of the stadium and
lit the Olympic cauldron.
After it was lit, a spectacular firework show followed, signaling
the official beginning of the 29th Olympiad.
Controversies
Media coverage
The coverage of the events by the media came under scrutiny during
the relay.
Chinese media
coverage of the torch relay has been distinct in a number of ways
from coverage elsewhere.
Western
reporters in Beijing have described Chinese media coverage as
partial and censored (for example when Chinese media did not
broadcast
Reporters Without
Borders' disruption of
the torch lighting
ceremony), whereas Chinese
netizens have
in turn accused Western media coverage of being biased.
The
French newspaper Libération
was criticised by the Chinese State press agency Xinhua
for its allegedly biased reporting; Xinhua
suggested that Libération needed "a stinging slap in the
face" for having "insulted the Olympic flame" and "supported a
handful of saboteurs".
In response to pro-Tibet and pro-human rights protests, the Chinese
media focused on the more disruptive protesters, referring for
example to "a very small number of 'Tibet independence'
secessionists and a handful of so-called human rights-minded NGO
activists" intent on "disrupting and sabotaging the Beijing Olympic
Games". However, the Chinese media published articles about crowds
supporting the torch relay.
Xinhua and
CCTV quoted
relay spectators who condemned the protests, to a greater extent
than most Western media, but did not quote any alternate
viewpoints, providing no coverage of support for the protests by
some ordinary citizens in Western countries. It quoted athletes who
expressed pride at taking part in the relays, to a greater extent
than Western media, but not those who, like
Marie-José Pérec, expressed
understanding and support for the protestors. The Beijing
Organising Committee for the Games mentioned the "smiling faces of
the elderly, children and the artists on the streets", of cheering
and supportive Londoners. Xinhua said that protesters were
"radicals" who "trampled human rights" and whose activities were
condemned by "the people of the world who cordially love the
Olympic spirit".
Reports
on the Delhi
relay were similarly distinct. Despite
intended torchbearers
Kiran Bedi,
Soha Ali Khan,
Sachin Tendulkar and
Bhaichung Bhutia all withdrawing from the
event, the official Chinese website for the relay reported "Indian
torchbearers vow to run for spirit of Olympics", and quoted
torchbearers
Manavjit Singh
Sandhu,
Abhinav Bindra,
Ayaan Ali Khan and
Rajinder Singh Rahelu all stating that
sports and politics should not be mixed.
Chinese media have also reported on
Jin
Jing, whom the official Chinese torch relay website described
as "heroic" and an "angel", whereas Western media initially gave
her little mention - despite a Chinese claim that "Chinese
Paralympic athlete Jin Jing has garnered much attention from the
media".
Some Western media have reported on Chinese accusations of Western
media bias.
The Daily
Telegraph published an opinion piece by the Chinese
ambassador to the United Kingdom,
Fu Ying,
who accused Western media of "demonising" China during their
coverage of the torch relays.
The Telegraph also asked its
readers to send their views in response to the question "Is the
West demonising China?" The
BBC reported on a
demonstration in Sydney by Chinese Australians "voicing support for
Beijing amid controversy over Tibet" and protesting against what
they saw as Western media bias. The report showed demonstrators
carrying signs which read "Shame on some Western media", "BBC CNN
lies too" and "Stop media distortion!". One demonstrator
interviewed by the BBC stated: "I saw some news from CNN, from the
BBC, some media [inaudible], and they are just lying."
Libération also reported that it had been accused of bias
by the Chinese media.
On April 17, Xinhua condemned what it called "biased coverage of
the
Lhasa
riots and the Olympic torch relay by the U.S.-based
Cable News Network (CNN)". The same day,
the Chinese government called on CNN to "apologise" for having
allegedly insulted the Chinese people, and for "attempting to
incite the Chinese people against the government". CNN issued a
statement on April 14, responded to China over 'thugs and goons'
comment by
Jack Cafferty.
On April
19, the BBC reported that 1,300 people had gathered outside BBC
buildings in Manchester
and London, protesting against what they described
as Western media bias. Several days earlier, the BBC had
published an article entitled "The challenges of reporting in
China", responding to earlier criticism. The BBC's Paul Danahar
noted that Chinese people were now "able to access the BBC News
website for the first time, after years of strict censorship", and
that "many were critical of our coverage". He provided readers with
a reminder of censorship in China, and added: "People who criticise
the media for their coverage in Tibet should acknowledge that we
were and still are banned from reporting there." He also quoted
critical Chinese responses, and invited readers to comment.
On April 20, the
People's
Daily published a report entitled "Overseas Chinese rally
against biased media coverage, for Olympics". It included images of
Chinese people demonstrating in France, the United Kingdom, Germany
and the United States. One picture showed Chinese demonstrators
holding a sign which claimed, incorrectly, that the BBC had not
reported on Jin Jing. The
People's Daily quoted one
protestor who claimed the "BBC on some of the recent events has
misled the British public and the rest of the world by providing
intensive untruthful reports and biased coverage."
On April 4, it was reported that the Chinese government appeared to
be running an anti-CNN website that criticizes the cable network’s
coverage of recent events. The site claims to have been created by
a Beijing citizen. However, foreign correspondents in Beijing
voiced suspicions that
Anti-cnn may be a
semi-government-made website. A Chinese government spokesman
insisted the site was spontaneously set up by a Chinese citizen
angered over media coverage.
Torch security
The Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee sent out a team of 30
unarmed attendants selected from the
People's Armed Police to escort the
flame throughout its journey. According to Asian Times, sworn in as
the "Beijing Olympic Games Sacred Flame Protection Unit" during a
ceremony in August 2007, their main job is to keep the Olympic
flame alight throughout the journey and to assist in transferring
the flame between the torches, the lanterns and the cauldrons. They
wear matching blue
tracksuits and are
intended to accompany the torch every step of the way. One of the
torch attendants, dubbed "Second Right Brother," has developed a
significant online fan-base, particularly among China's female
netizens.
Two additional teams of 40 attendants each will accompany the flame
on its Mainland China route. This arrangement has however sparked
several controversies.
Flashpoints
On April 6, Sebastian Coe, the head of 2012 London Summer Olympics said about the attendants, "Horrible...They tried to push me out of the way three times. They did not speak English. They were thugs." According to the China News Service, however, the attendants have received training in five foreign languages (English, French, German, Spanish and Japanese) and the etiquette of various countries before their mission. Konnie Huq reportedly described them as "bloody aggressive" and "robotic". The BBC reported that London's Metropolitan Police criticized the Protection Unit for "getting in the way of officers trying to restore calm". Also in the United Kingdom, Shadow Home Secretary David Davis expressed concerns about the Protection Unit, and asked Home Secretary Jacqui Smith: “Who in the British Government authorized their presence and what checks were made as to their background?” Damian Hockney, a member of the Metropolitan Police Authority, stated that "there's no way people like that should be allowed on our streets". At a later mayoral debate, the incumbent mayor, Ken Livingstone, admitted that allowing the Chinese secret police to guard the Olympic torch during its London relay was a mistake saying "it was wrong and should not have happened". On April 25, the British government's national security department, the Home Office, passed complaints about Chinese security guards' conduct during the London Olympic torch relay to the Olympic Games organisers. Home Secretary Jacqui Smith stated that the guards had no policing powers and that they could only protect the Olympic flame by "placing themselves between the offender and the torch bearer". She also added, "We are raising concerns that have been reported in the media and by spectators at the torch relay with the Beijing Organising Committee for the Olympic Games through the event organisers."
- On April 7, during the torch's journey through Paris, due to
frequent attempts by protesters who were seemingly from the
pro-Tibet camp to capture or extinguish the torch, flame attendants
extinguished the torch on several occasions and removed it from the
hands of torchbearers to place it aboard a bus, thus altering the
intended relay. This prompted criticism from Paris' mayor, Bertrand Delanoë, who accused them of
"disrupting" the passing of the torch from athlete David Douillet to Teddy Riner.
- On April 11, the chairman of the National Public Safety
Commission of Japan, Shinya Izumi
indicated that Japan will not welcome "security runners" from China
to accompany the Olympic torch when it arrives in Nagano if their role is to serve as guards. Izumi
said, "We do not know what position the people who escorted the
relay are in," Izumi continued, "If they are for the consideration
of security, it is our role." The director-General of the National Police Agency of
Japan, Hiroto Yoshimura said the issue was connected to Japan's
sovereignty, "If the accompanying runners are there to provide
maintenance for the torch, then there's no problem, but if they are
providing security then it's a problem in terms of violating
Japan's sovereignty, and we would tell the Chinese side not to
provide security."
- On April 7, the federal government of Australia ruled out any
Chinese involvement in security operations when the Olympic torch
arrives in Australia. Chinese flame attendants will be allowed into
Australia, but only to maintain the flame. The chairman of the
Canberra relay taskforce, Ted Quinlan, has stated they "could be
subject to arrest [...] if they laid a hand on somebody". On April
22, Chinese ambassador to Australia Zhang Junsai stated that the
flame attendants would "use their bodies" to protect the torch in
Canberra. Following a talk with Australian Olympic Committee
president John Coates,
Ambassador Zhang subsequently said that his statement had been
"misinterpreted". Coates said that the flame attendants were
"technical assistants", and re-iterated that they would play no
security role. Shortly before the beginning of the Canberra relay,
Australian and Chinese officials argued in public over the role of
the flame attendants, during a press conference. Beijing spokesman Qu
Yingpu stated that the attendants' role included security, a claim
immediatedly rejected by Australian Capital Territory
Chief Minister Jon
Stanhope, who, sitting a few metres from Qu and "clearly
furious" according to the Herald Sun,
re-iterated once more that Australian police would handle all
security. The International Olympic
Committee
subsequently backed Australia's position, with IOC
president Jacques Rogge stating: "The
sovereignty of Australia is absolute; security is a matter for
Australia, it is not a matter for these people, that is very
clear." During the relay itself, three Chinese guards
nonetheless attempted to run alongsided the torchbearers, and were
repeatedly pulled away by Australian police.
IOC Response
- In
response to these controversies, the International Olympic
Committee
noted on April 9 that the Protection Unit's role is
"100% normal...The torch relay escort team is always supplied by
the organising committee of the Games... there is nothing unusual
about it". The Chinese government has also responded to the
criticism, with Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu stating:
"Relevant countries should have a clear understanding of the
rules of the escorts and understand their work. They have
used their bodies to protect the torch, so their acts should be
praised and the violent acts of those Tibet independence elements
be condemned." Also, according to British journalist Brendan
O’Neill, there is nothing mysterious about the security-service
employees of the Beijing Olympic Organising Committee. O'Neill
reported presence of foreign security officials in the UK and their
duty to guard foreign embassies and protect visiting foreign
dignitaries. During 2004
Olympic torch relay, Greek security officials followed and
monitored the movement of the Olympic flame.
Reactions
In China, a call to boycott French hypermart
Carrefour from May 1 began spreading through
mobile
text messaging and online chat
rooms amongst the Chinese over the weekend from April 12, accusing
the company's major shareholder, the
LVMH
Group, of donating funds to the
Dalai
Lama. There were also calls to extend the boycott to include
French luxury goods and cosmetic products.
Chinese protesters
organized boycotts of the French-owned retail chain Carrefour in major Chinese cities including
Kunming
, Hefei
and Wuhan
, accusing
the French nation of pro-secessionist
conspiracy and anti-Chinese
racism. Some burned
French flags,
some added
Nazism's
Swastika to the French flag, and spread short
online messages calling for large protests in front of French
consulates and embassy. Some shoppers who insisted on entering one
of the Carrefour stores in Kunming were blocked by boycotters
wielding large
Chinese flags and hit
by water bottles.
Hundreds of people joined Anti-French
rallies in Beijing, Wuhan, Hefei, Kunming and Qingdao
, which quickly spread to other cities like Xi'an
, Harbin
and Jinan
. Carrefour denied any support or involvement
in the Tibetan issue, and had its staff in its Chinese stores wear
uniforms emblazoned with the Chinese national flag and caps with
Olympic insignia and as well as the words "Beijing 2008" to show
its support for the games. The effort had to be ceased when the
BOCOG deemed the use of official Olympic insignia as illegal and a
violation of copyright.
In response to the demonstrations, the Chinese government attempted
to calm the situation, possibly fearing the protests may spiral out
of control as has happened in recent years, including the
anti-Japanese protests in 2005. State media and commentaries began
to call for calm, such as an editorial in the
People's Daily which urged Chinese
people to "express [their] patriotic enthusiasm calmly and
rationally, and express patriotic aspiration in an orderly and
legal manner". The government also began to patrol and censor the
internet forums such as
Sohu.com, with comments
related to the Carrefour boycott removed.
In the days prior to
the planned boycott, evidence of efforts by Chinese authorities to
choke the mass boycott's efforts online became even more evident,
including barring searches of words related to the French protests,
but protests broke out nonetheless in front of Carrefour's stores
at Beijing, Changsha
, Fuzhou
and Shenyang
on May 1.
Pro-China rallies and demonstrations were held in several cities in
response to the relay protests, including Paris, London, Berlin and
Los Angeles.
In Japan, the Mayor of
Nagano,
Shoichi Washizawa said that it has become a "great nuisance" for
the city to host the torch relay prior to the Nagano leg.
Washizawa's aides said the mayor's remark was not criticism about
the relay itself but about the potential disruptions and confusion
surrounding it. A city employee of the Nagano City Office ridiculed
the protests in Europe, he said "They are doing something foolish",
in a televised interview. Nagano City officially apologized later
and explained what he had wanted to say was "Such violent protests
were not easy to accept".Also citing concerns about protests as
well as the recent violence in Tibet, a major Buddhist temple in
Nagano cancelled its plans to host the opening stage of the Olympic
torch relay, this temple was vandalised by an un-identified person
the day after in apparent revenge,
See also
References
- See also: 'No change in Tibet torch rally route',
Times of
India, Retrieved on April 10, 2008.
- China condemns "despicable" torch disruptions,
Reuters. April 7, 2008.
- IOC flags athlete free speech dilemma, The
Australian. April 12, 2008.
- Olympic Official Calls Protests a ‘Crisis’,
The New York Times. April 11, 2008.
- IOC mulls cancellation of torch relay,
USAToday. April 8, 2008.
- IOC mulls abandoning international routes in
future, The Economic Times. April 8, 2008.
- "International torch relay for Beijing Paralympic
Games cancelled", Xinhua, June 25, 2008
- The Beijing Olympic Torch, The Official Website
of the 2008 Summer Olympics Torch Relay
- 示威不斷 聖火難傳 境外是否續運 奧委周五定奪, Apple Daily.
- The Torch Relay lantern, The Official Website
of the 2008 Summer Olympics Torch Relay
- "La Chine condamne les troubles sur le parcours de
la flame", France 24, April 8, 2008
- Olympic Torch Emits 5,500 Tons of CO2,
ABC News (April 9, 2008).
- Air China Successfully Wins the Title of
'Designated Olympic Torch Carrier', Reuters (March 18,
2008).
- Olympic Flame begins relay in Greece at the
Official Website of the Torch Relay
- See also: and
- See also:
- See also: See also:
- "Anti-French rallies across China", BBC, April
19, 2008
- "Protests continue; restraint urged",
People's Daily, April 21, 2008.
- See also:
- See also:
- 特拉法加广场护圣火归来 See also: 伦敦迎奥运火炬照片
- "China condemns Olympic torch disruptions",
France 24, April 8, 2008
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France 24, April 8, 2008
- "Flamme olympique: ce qui s'est vraiment passé à
Paris", L'Express, April 8, 2008
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France 24, April 8, 2008
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not true", April 8, 2008
- Video coverage by France 2 (at 00:14) See also: Video coverage by France 2 (at 02:21)
- David Douillet, interviewed by France 2, April
7, 2008
- See also:
- See also: "A Paris, la flamme olympique achève son parcours à
l'abri des regards", Le Monde, April 7, 2008
- "De la tour Eiffel à Charléty, la flamme dans la tourmente
à Paris", Libération, April 7, 2008 See also: "La déroute de la flamme olympique à Paris",
Le Figaro, April 7, 2008 See also: "Le chemin de croix de la flamme à Paris",
Le Soir, April 7, 2008
- "La flamme : deuxième épisode", Le Journal
du dimanche, April 7, 2008
- "JO Pékin 2008 : Manifestations pro-Tibet au
Trocadéro", LCI, April 7, 2008
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une flamme... invisible", AFP, 7 avril 2008
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Libération, April 8, 2008
- "Selon MAM, aucune instruction n’a été donnée pour
confisquer les drapeaux tibétains", Libération, April
8, 2008
- France 2 video coverage, April 7, 2008
- See also: NBC Torch Relay: Bloggers Gets Close To The Action,
nbc
- See also:
- Tutu, Gere, to protest; San Francisco alters torch
route, M&C News, April 8, 2008.
- See also:
- San Francisco Olympic torch relay gets off to
chaotic start, MarketWatch, April 9, 2008.
- Protests and Cheers Along Torch Route, The New York
Times, April 9, 2008.
- Torch leaves S.F. after surprise route
shift
- San Francisco torch relay no 'joyous party' but IOC
relieved, Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation. April 10, 2008.
- See also:
- Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax
(page 4, list of directors) See also:
- "Torch in peaceful Tanzania relay", BBC, April 13,
2008 See also: "Olympic torch breezes untroubled through
Africa", France 24, April 13, 2008
- "Relaxed Omanis welcome Olympic torch", AFP,
April 14, 2008 See also: "Olympic flame back to Asia in Muscat relay",
official torch relay website, April 14, 2008
- "Torch's most sensitive leg of Olympic
journey", Herald Sun, April 16, 2008
- "Olympic torch relay in Pakistan", BBC, April
16, 2008
- "New Delhi leg of Olympic torch relay
concludes", official torch relay website, April 17, 2008
- "India's soccer captain refuses to join in Beijing
Olympic torch run in Indian capital", Sandeep Nakai, The
China Post (Taiwan), April 1, 2008
- See also: See also: See also: See also:
- "Day in pictures", BBC, April 16, 2008
- "Olympic flame arrives in Thailand", France 24,
April 18, 2008 See also: "Beijing Olympic Flame arrives in Bangkok",
official torch relay website, April 18, 2008
- "Olympic flame sheds glee in 'City of Smile'",
official torch relay website, April 19, 2008
- "Narisa, activists boycott Beijing Olympics",
Bangkok Post, March 22, 2008
- "Security surrounds Bangkok relay", BBC, April
19, 2008
- "Olympic flame arrives in Thailand", France 24,
April 18, 2008
- "Torch-bearer boycotts Bangkok Olympic relay",
France 24, April 19, 2008
- North Korea hosts Olympic torch, CNN. April 27,
2008.
- See also: See also:
- "Jakarta Olympic relay cut short",
Al Jazeera, April
22, 2008
- "Torch weathers Indonesia protest", BBC, April
22, 2008
- "Indonesian police break up pro-Tibet rally",
France 24, April 22, 2008 See also: "Torch weathers Indonesia protest", BBC, April 22,
2008
- "Jakarta Olympic relay cut short",
Al Jazeera, April
22, 2008 See also: "Torch weathers Indonesia protest", BBC, April 22,
2008
- See also: "Indonesian police break up pro-Tibet rally",
France 24, April 22, 2008 See also: "Torch weathers Indonesia protest", BBC, April 22,
2008
- "Australian official: No cut in torch relay course
in Canberra", official torch relay website, April 11, 2008
- "Olympic torch relay starts in Canberra",
official torch relay website, April 24, 2008
- "Olympic torch lands in Australia", Brendan
Nicholson, The Age, April 23, 2008
- "Olympic flame in Canberra for relay",
Sydney Morning Herald, April 23, 2008 See also: "Beijing Olympic flame arrives in Canberra",
official torch relay website, April 23, 2008
- Rival demonstrators face off in Canberra,
ABC News
Online, April 24, 2008
- "China's determination to 'defend' relay sparks
fury", Ben English, Herald Sun, April 24, 2008
- 外交部发言人秦刚否认有关中方提出派军队赴澳大利亚保护奥运火炬传递的谣言, PRC
Ministry of Foreign Affairs. March 29, 2008.
- "Chinese rally in Australia to guard Olympic
flame", Rob Taylor, The Guardian, April 16, 2008
- "Olympic torch sizzles in Australia", Sid
Astbury, The Independent (South Africa), April 17,
2008
- "Chinese in Australia vow to defend Olympic torch
from pro-Tibet 'scum'", Nick Squires, The Daily
Telegraph, April 16, 2008
- "China urging supporters to attend torch rally:
Australian FM", Madeleine Coorey, AFP, April 22, 2008
- "Australian torch bearer pulls out of Olympic relay
citing human rights concerns", The Star, April 22,
2008 See also: "Australian torch runner pulls out of Olympic
relay", AFP, April 22, 2008
- "Rival demonstrators face off in Canberra", ABC
News, April 24, 2008
- "Chinese rent-a-crowd inflamed Olympic torch
tensions", Ben English, The Daily Telegraph, April 25,
2008
- "Australian torch relay ends with minor
skirmishes", CNN, April 24, 2008
- Olympic relay ends in Australia with little
interruption, International Herald Tribune. April 24,
2008.
- See also:
- Event cancelled for Nagano leg of Olympic torch
relay, breitbart.com. April 14, 2008.
- Japan mobs Olympic torch of trouble,
The Times.
April 27, 2008.
- Olympic Torch Hits Nagano Without Hitch,
Time. April 26, 2008.
- "2 South Koreans boycott Olympic torch relay to
protest Tibet crackdown", International Herald
Tribune, April 22, 2008
- Clashes break out at Olympic torch relay in South
Korea, Los Angeles Times
- 중국인 폭력 시위 아닌 폭동, 투데이코리아
- 한국인 중국서 공안 때렸으면 죽었을 것, Chosun Ilbo
- 정부, 중국인 폭력시위 법에 따라 엄정대처, Yonhap
News
- 성화봉송 폭력 중국인 강제 출국 조치, Yonhap News
- North Korea hosts its first Olympic torch
relay, International Herald Tribune. April 28,
2008.
- UN pulls out of North Korea Olympic torch ceremony
amid fears of propaganda coup The Times. April 6, 2008.
- See also:
- 200,000 expected to fan the Olympic flame
"The Standard"
Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- Beijing 2008 Olympics torch relay - Activities,
Leisure and Cultural Services Department, Gov.hk. Accessed on April
27, 2008.
- SCMP. " SCMP." Torch lineup net could have been
cast wider. Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- 200,000 expected to fan the Olympic flame
"The Standard"
Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- Bloomberg.com. " Hong Kong Hosts Torch Relay Amid Support,
Criticism." Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- IOC chief: Olympics in 'crisis' over torch chaos,
NBC
- SCMP. " SCMP." Tensions evident during HK torch
relay. Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- Keep Olympic torch run free of protest, pleads
sports boss, The Standard. Accessed on April 11,
2007.
- Msnbc. " Msnbc." Major China support in Hong Kong
torch run. Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- SCMP. " SCMP." HK Olympic torch relay proceeding
smoothly. Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- AP. Torch relay inspires show of patriotism in Hong
Kong
- "Protesting the Torch in Hong Kong",
International Herald Tribune (video report), May 5,
2008
- Color orange. " Color
orange." We have just received this message from the Orange
group in the airport of HK. Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- IHT. " International Herald Tribune." Mia Farrow enters
Hong Kong to give speech critical of China-Sudan ties.
Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- SCMP. " SCMP." Article. Retrieved on
2008-05-07.
- SCMP. " SCMP." Censors stalking Macau's Net
users. Retrieved on 2008-07-04.
- Yahoo news. " Yahoo news." Olympic torch enjoys smooth
run in casino haven Macau. Retrieved on 2008-05-02.
- SCMP. " SCMP." Cross-strait theme for Quanzhou
relay. Retrieved on 2008-05-12.
- SCMP. " SCMP." Man arrested for chat-room threat to
grab torch. Retrieved on 2008-05-15.
- SCMP. " SCMP." United we stand. Retrieved on
2008-05-13.
- "Beijing Olympics 2008: Tibet policy angers IOC
chiefs", The Daily Telegraph, June 25, 2008.
- "Sarkozy n'exclut pas un boycott de la cérémonie
des JO", Europe 1,
March 25, 2008 See also: "Un allumage agité pour la flamme des JO",
Radio Suisse Romande, March 25,
2008
- "China online: Tibet and torch reaction", BBC,
April 17, 2008 See also: "China's new chart-topper: 'Don’t be too like
CNN'", France 24, April 17, 2008 See also: "CNN accused of bending the truth about Tibet",
France 24, April 17, 2008
- "Donnons une claque cinglante à « Libération
»", Xinhua, April 13, 2008
- "Beijing Olympic official strongly condemns
disruption of torch relay in Paris", Xinhua, April 8, 2008 See
also: "Tibetan separatists try to sabotage Olympic torch
relay in U.S.", Xinhua, April 10, 2008
- "Crowds gather to show support for Olympic torch
relay" Xinhua, April 10, 2008
- "French Olympic chief, spectators condemn
disruption of Olympic torch relay in Paris", Xinhua, April 8,
2008 See also: "Netizens worldwide condemn violent protests at
Olympic torch relay", April 8, 2008 See also: "Chinese Americans criticize torch relay disturbance",
CCTV, April 10, 2008
- "Ugandan track queen steps up training for Olympic
torch relay", Xinhua, April 7, 2008
- Marie-José Pérec interviewed by France 24, April 7, 2008
- "Ambassador Fu: Olympic torch spreads message of
peace to the world", official torch relay website, April 7,
2008
- "BOOC thanks overseas supporters for torch relay,
criticizes radical saboteurs", Xinhua, April 10, 2008
- "Won't be caged, so won't run with torch: Kiran
Bed", The Times of India, April 10, 2008
- "Soha opts out of Olympic torch relay", The
Hindu, April 15, 2008
- "Tendulkar bowed out from Olympic torch relay",
Newstrack India, April 16, 2008
- "Indian torchbearers vow to run for spirit of
Olympics", official torch relay website, April 16, 2008
- "Handicapped Jin receives hero's welcome for
protecting Olympic torch in Paris", Xinhua, April 10, 2008 See
also: "Touche: Assailant meets match", Lydia Chen,
Shanghai Daily, April 9, 2008 See also: "Handicapped girl wins respect for protecting sacred
flame", CCTV, April 10, 2008
- "Photos: Heroic torchbearer Jin Jing back in
Beijing", official torch relay website, April 9, 2008
- "Chinese angel comes home", official torch
relay website, April 10, 2008
- "Jin: Protecting the torch is my duty",
official torch relay website, April 10, 2008
- "Chinese ambassador Fu Ying: Western media has
'demonised' China", Fu Ying, The Daily Telegraph,
April 13, 2008
- "Is the West demonising China?", The Daily
Telegraph, April 13, 2008
- "Pro-China rally in Australia", BBC, April 14,
2008
- "«Libé» épinglé en Chine", Pascale Nivelle,
Libération, April 12, 2008
- "CNN biased coverage comes under fire", Xinhua,
April 17, 2008
- "China urges again that CNN sincerely apologizes
over insulting words", Xinhua, April 17, 2008
- CNN apologises to China over 'thugs and goons'
comment by Jack Cafferty Alexi Mostrous, Times, April 16,
2008.
- "The challenges of reporting in China", BBC,
April 3, 2008
- "China online: Tibet and torch reaction", BBC,
April 17, 2008 See also: "Carrefour faces China boycott bid", BBC, April 15,
2008
- "Overseas Chinese rally against biased media
coverage, for Olympics", People's Daily, April 20,
2008
- "Overseas Chinese in Britain rally in protest
against Western media distortion", People's Daily,
April 20, 2008
- Report: China seen sponsoring anti-CNN website,
World Tribune. April 4, 2008.
- "Tracksuited guardians of the flame", BBC,
April 9, 2008
- "Questions raised over mysterious 'men in
blue'", Jerome Taylor and Clifford Coonan, The
Independent, April 8, 2008
- "Unmasked: Chinese guardians of Olympic torch",
The Times, April 9, 2008
- "Sinister Keepers of the Flame: Controversy over
'Thuggish' Chinese Olympic Torch Guards", Alexander Schwabe,
Der
Spiegel, April 9, 2008
- "Mayor admits olympic torch error",
BBC news website, April 15,
2008
- "Controversy over 'Thuggish' Chinese Olympic Torch
Guards", Alexander Schwabe, Der Spiegel, April 9,
2008
- "Delanoë: le passage de la flamme à Paris,
"mouvement fort" en faveur du Tibet", AFP, April 8, 2008 See
also: Video coverage by France 2, April 7, 2008
- "Australia warns Olympic torch guards over tough
tactics", Haroon Siddique, The Guardian, April 16,
2008 See also:
- "Olympic torch lands in Australia", The
Age, April 23, 2008
- "Olympic flame in Canberra for relay",
Sydney Morning Herald, April 23, 2008
- "China's determination to 'defend' relay sparks
fury", Ben English, Herald Sun, April 24, 2008 See
also: "Australia, China disagree on torch security",
ABC Radio Australia, April 23, 2008
- "Rogge backs Rudd on torch security", The
Australian, April 24, 2008
- "Smooth run for Australia's relay", BBC, April
24, 2008
- "Heavy security for torch in Delhi", BBC, April
17, 2008
- Chinese cities hit by fresh anti-Western
protests, ChannelNewsAsia.
- Beijing strips Carrefour workers of goodwill
hats, Reuters.
- Fresh protests staged at Carrefour stores in
China, ChannelNewsAsia.
- Chinese holding rallies to back Beijing Games,
China Daily.
External links
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Official videos
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