Shame! Shame! Shame to a Vile "Olympic Host" -- Protests snuff out
Olympic torch in Paris / Reuters
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fa2mgY36__g
France 24 TV Reporting : Olympic Protest, torch extinguished several times
Protests snuff out Olympic torch in Paris
Mon Apr 7, 2008 5:10pm EDT
By Chris Buckley and Thierry Leveque
BEIJING/PARIS (Reuters) - The Olympic torch relay descended into chaos
in Paris on Monday with officials having to extinguish the flame and
carry it by bus when pro-Tibet protesters tried to seize it.
Chinese authorities condemned as "vile" the growing campaign by
activists to use the buildup to the Beijing Olympics as a stage on which
to condemn China's record in Tibet, on human rights in general and
attack its foreign policy.
They said there would be no change to the elaborate ritual of carrying
the flame around the world.
The Paris torch relay hit trouble almost as soon as it set off from the
Eiffel Tower, and was repeatedly halted by protesters who threatened to
break through the imposing security cordon thrown around the athletes
carrying the flame.
The torch had to be extinguished at least twice and sheltered in a bus
on several occasions from the thousands of demonstrators. A Chinese
official was quoted by Xinhua news agency as saying it was put out for
safety reasons.
Demonstrators carried banners declaring "Boycott Chinese goods" and
"Save Tibet".
"We are doing our best but it will take the world to put pressure on
China to help bring democracy and human rights to Tibet," said Phurbu
Dolker, a 21-year-old Tibetan refugee.
Police detained 18 protesters, the Interior Ministry said.
Embarrassed Chinese organizers cancelled a reception for the torch at
Paris city hall at the last minute after a banner supporting human
rights was hung from the facade, Paris mayor Bernard Delanoe told reporters.
"The Chinese officials decided they would not stop here because they
were put out by Parisian citizens expressing their support for human
rights. It is their responsibility," he said.
It was a second consecutive day of chaos for the torch run.
Thousands of protesters waving Tibetan flags and shouting "Shame on
China" turned Sunday's British leg of the international relay billed by
Beijing as the "harmonious journey" into an obstacle course. Police
detained 35 people.
The torch arrives on Wednesday in San Francisco, where three pro-Tibet
activists scaled the cables of the city's famed Golden Gate Bridge and
hung protest banners on Monday. "One World, One Dream: Free Tibet," read
one of them.
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge said he
was very concerned "with the international situation and what's happened
in Tibet".
"Violence for whatever reason is not compatible with the values of the
torch relay and the Olympic Games," he said in a speech to the
Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) in Beijing. "Some
people have played with the idea of boycotts. As I speak today, there is
no momentum for a general boycott."
UNREST IN TIBET
"A tiny number of Tibet independence elements sought to disrupt the
relay of the Olympic Games sacred flame through London," Xinhua quoted a
spokesperson for the Beijing Olympic Games torch relay office as saying
of the London events.
"We strongly condemn this vile behavior."
Beijing Organizing Committee Director of Media and Communications Wang
Hui told a news conference:
"The smooth progress of the torch relay cannot be stopped and will
definitely be a big success."
Tibet's capital, Lhasa, was hit last month by Buddhist monks' protests
against Chinese rule which gave way to rioting. Since then security
forces have poured in to reimpose control there and in other restive
Tibetan areas.
Exiled Tibetans accuse China of systematic oppression of the Himalayan
region over decades, and of the killing, torture and unjust imprisonment
of those who oppose Beijing's rule.
CALLS FOR BOYCOTT
U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton urged President
George W. Bush on Monday to boycott the Olympics opening ceremonies
unless China improves human rights.
Clinton, in a statement, cited clashes in Tibet and the lack of pressure
by China on Sudan to stop "the genocide in Darfur."
Bush has resisted pressure to change his plans to attend.
As well as Tibet, activists are also focusing on Sudan, where critics
say Beijing has not done enough to help stop violence in Darfur.
The U.N. children's agency UNICEF said on Monday it had withdrawn from
the North Korean leg of the Olympic torch run because it would not help
draw attention to the plight of children in North Korea.
China accuses Tibet's exiled Buddhist leader, the Dalai Lama, of
organizing the unrest. Tibet's Communist Party chief Zhang Qingli has
called him a "jackal in Buddhist monk's robes".
Chinese popular opinion backs official claims that followers of the
Dalai Lama timed the unrest to disrupt the games. He has denied this and
said he wants autonomy, not independence.
Speaking at a Beijing news conference after meeting Chinese Premier Wen
Jiabao, New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark said she had called on
China to reopen dialogue with the Dalai Lama.
China says 19 people died in the Lhasa unrest, mostly at the hands of
Tibetan rioters. Representatives of the Dalai Lama say about 140 people
died in broader unrest across Tibet and nearby areas, most of them
Tibetans killed by Chinese security forces.
(Additional reporting by Nick Mulvenney and Alan Wheatley; Writing by
Andrew Roche; Editing by Charles Dick)
http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSSP23296420080407