Beijing welcomes Olympic torch

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President Hu Jintao took part in the televised event at Tiananmen Square, holding the torch aloft before passing it to Chinese sporting icon Liu Xiang.
Security was tight amid concerns of possible anti-government protests.
Last week protesters opposed to Chinese actions in Tibet clashed with police at the torch lighting ceremony in Greece.
On Tuesday the torch goes to Almaty in Kazakhstan, its next stop on a tour of 20 countries.
The 130-day relay - the longest ever, and with the most torch-bearers - underlines the importance China is giving to the Games, which it hopes to use as a showcase of its rapid economic and political rise.
But activists say they intend to use the torch relay to highlight concerns over violence in Tibet, China’s role in Sudan and domestic human rights issues.

Lavish welcome
The flame arrived from Greece early on Monday, aboard a chartered Air China plane, and was greeted at Beijing airport by hundreds of flag-waving schoolchildren.
Students and workers sang the Olympic slogan “One World, One Dream”.
President Hu Jintao lit a cauldron on a red-carpeted rostrum, and then handed the torch to Olympic champion hurdler Liu Xiang, who ran the first leg of the relay.

“I declare the torch relay of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games begun,” said Mr Hu.

‘Timeless symbol’
Sunday’s formal torch handover was held in the Panathinaiko Stadium in Athens, where the first modern Olympics took place in 1896.
Minos Kyriakou, president of the Hellenic Olympic Committee, passed the flame to the chief organiser of the Beijing Games, Liu Qi.
“The Olympic flame is the timeless symbol which stirs admiration, pride and faith [in] the Olympic ideals and values,” said Mr Kyriakou. “I hope the world community welcomes the flame and honours it”.
But there are fears the torch relay will be a magnet for anti-China protests, and activists have already been planning demonstrations in London, Paris and San Francisco - where the torch is heading in the next 10 days.
At last week’s flame-lighting ceremony in Greece, campaigners broke through police lines and unfurled a Tibetan flag before being dragged away.
On Sunday, as the torch was handed over to the Chinese, a small group of protesters tried to unfurl a banner which said “Stop genocide in Tibet”, but failed to enter the stadium.
A further flashpoint for protests could be Tibet itself. The torch passes through Tibet in May, en route to Mount Everest, and then again when it goes through the city of Lhasa in June.
Despite the massive security presence in Lhasa, there was a fresh protest there over the weekend, according to Tibetan activist groups.

from: bbc.co.uk

Beijing to ban smoking in public places from May

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The Chinese capital will ban smoking in most public places starting from May 1 — a big step toward tobacco control in a nation of 350 million smokers.
The move will also meet China’s pledge of a smoke-free Olympics.
More than 150 Chinese cities already have limited restrictions in place, but the capital will be the first to ban smoking in all restaurants, offices and schools, English-language China Daily reported Monday.
Beijing has had some smoking restrictions since 1996, when the municipal government prohibited lighting up in large public venues such as schools, sports arenas and movie theaters.
The new rules, which were announced on Saturday, expand the scope to include restaurants, bars, Internet cafes, hotels, offices, holiday resorts and all indoor areas of medical facilities.
Hotels must also have rooms for non-smokers, but the ratio is still being discussed, said Cui Xiaobo, a renowned tobacco control expert who helped draft the new rule.
Institutions that fail to comply face immediate fines of up to 5,000 yuan (713 U.S. dollars), while it has not yet been decided how to deal with smokers breaking the new rule.
“There are proposals to fine individuals up to 200 yuan,” said Cui. “They won’t be fined for now, because some legislators insist the new rule contradicts a previous law.”
Cui added that more details on how caterers and bar owners should enforce the ban will be released soon.
Some restaurant owners, however, doubt the rule will be implemented.
For Chinese, smoking is part of a meal, said Zhao Yingqi, manager of Jingweilou Restaurant in the city’s downtown. His restaurant has about 20 non-smoking tables compared to the 400 plus tables with glass or steel ashtrays on each.
“It’s not a bad idea to have non-smoking restaurants,” said a 40-year-old smoker surnamed Xie who was dining at the restaurant. The majority of diners support the new rule, in line with national surveys last year.
Guo Xiaodong, boss of the first smoke-free restaurant in Beijing, said it is most important that caterers understand and abide by the rule.
Bars will also be forced to make changes. The rule requires smoking areas to be strictly segregated with clear signs.

from: chinadaily.com.cn 

Chinese President announces official start of Olympic torch relay

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Chinese President Hu Jintao lit a cauldron at Beijing’s Tiananmen Square with the Olympic torch Monday morning, marking the official start of the round-the-world relay.
The ceremony kicked off on the square at the heart of Beijing two hours after a specially chartered Air China plane carrying the flame from Greece touched down at about 9 a.m.
Vice President Xi Jinping, member of the Political Bureau Standing Committee of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC), addressed the ceremony.
Zhou Yongkang, member of the nine-man Political Bureau Standing Committee, and other CPC and state leaders attended the ceremony.
Also present was International Olympic Committee (IOC) Coordination Commission chairman Hein Verbruggen, who addressed the ceremony on behalf of IOC president Jacques Rogge.
The flame is scheduled to depart from Beijing on Tuesday for the Kazakh city of Almaty, the first stop in its global tour of 135 cities.
The relay will cover 137,000 kilometers in 130 days before the flame finally arrives at the National Stadium in Beijing on Aug 8,2008 for the opening ceremony.

 

hujintao.jpg

Chinese President Hu Jintao (1st R) shakes hands with Hein Verbruggen, chairman of the Coordination Commission of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), during a welcome ceremony for the Olympic flame and launching of the Beijing Olympic torch relay at the Tian’anmen Square in Beijing, capital of China, on March 31, 2008. (Xinhua Photo)

from: xinhuanet.com

IOC president’s Jacques Rogge message to Beijing Olympic torch relay

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The Olympic Flame has arrived in Beijing, announcing that the first ever Olympic Games in China will soon begin.
The combination of the Olympic flame and torch is one of the most well known and strongest symbols of the Olympic movement, heralding not just the arrival of the Games but also spreading a message of peace or “Ekecheiria”, as the Greeks call it, to the world.
From today, the torch will carry the flame across the globe, creating anticipation and excitement for the Beijing Games wherever the relay passes.
Crossing five continents, 21 cities around the globe, and more than 113 cities and prefectures on mainland China, wherever it passes the Olympic torch relay will cause everyone, whatever their nationality, culture or belief, to pause for a few moments to reflect on its message of peace and the Olympic values of excellence, friendship and respect.
All along the relay route people will be touched by the magic of the Olympic Games and what it represents.
Indeed, many people, especially young people, will find that the Olympic torch relay ignites a passion and inspires them to participate in sport, to give their very best in all they do, and emulate their heroes.
It is the torch’s ability to touch us that allows it to reach out to the world, beyond the host city, to bring the Olympic values closer to society and call the people of the world to the Games.
I am certain that the Games themselves, will not only be a moment of sporting excellence, but also an opportunity for the people of China and the world to learn, discover and respect each other.
Allow me to conclude by thanking you, President Hu Jintao, and the Chinese people, for your continued support for the Beijing Games and for the Olympic torch relay. Your passion and enthusiasm will allow these Games to fulfill their full potential.
I would also like to thank our Chinese friends from the Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee, and in particular its president Mr. Liu Qi, for their strong and continuous focus on making the Beijing Games a unique and exceptional celebration of humanity.
Now, let’s all celebrate together the arrival of the Olympic flame in Beijing before the real party in 130 days — the opening of the Games of the XXIX Olympiad in Beijing.

from: torchrelay.beijing2008.cn

Canada’s Olympic qualifying hopes take major blow after 2-1 loss to Haiti

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Canada’s hopes to qualify in men’s soccer for the 2008 Olympics received a major blow when Haiti rallied late for a 2-1 victory Friday night in the CONCACAF qualifying tournament.

With one game left in Group B play, Canada fell to last place in the four-team group with one point. Haiti earned three points with the victory. Alain Gustave, who entered the game in the 33rd minute, tied the score in the 72nd minute with a 19-yard line drive inside the right post.
Then in the 84th minute, Leonel Saint-Preux won the game with a 40-yard shot from the right flank that fluttered over the outstretched right hand of goalkeeper Josh Wagenaar and into the upper-left corner of the net.
Tyler Rosenlund and Kyle Hall, newcomers to the starting lineup, combined to put Canada ahead in the 17th minute.
Hall dribbled along the right flank, outraced two defenders and crossed the ball to Rosenlund, who redirected the ball from nine yards.
Rosenlund replaced Tosaint Ricketts on the left flank and Hall started at forward for Will Johnson, who was suspended after receiving a red card Wednesday night against Mexico.
The top two teams will advance to the March 20 semifinals in Nashville, Tenn.

source: canadianpress.google.com

Speaking contest ties China & Canada

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Eloquent, articulate … these are just a couple of words to describe the speeches in an English Speaking Contest held Saturday at Beijing Foreign Studies University. All the young talents tried their luck with the topic–”Development Through Sports: Canada and China“.
Thirteen students from thirteen universities across China, including Peking University and Beijing Foreign Studies University, made it to the final round of the contest. All of them attempted to impress and entertain both the judges and the audience with their words. They were scored according to their delivery, reasoning and the ultimate challenge of English fluency.

The English Speaking Contest is associated with the upcoming 2008 Beijing Summer Olympic Games and the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics, as contestants were required to give their thoughts on the relationship of sports and development.

Each contestant underwent three tests on stage: the Prepared Speech, the Impromptu Speech, and a special Q&A section dedicated to the Olympics. Questions like “In how many Chinese cities is the 2008 Beijing Olympics to be held ” and “How many mascots are there for the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics” had both contestants and the audience ponder for a while.
The competition was co-organized by Beijing Foreign Studies University and the Association for Canadian Studies in China. Organizers hope the competition will generate more Olympic interest in the younger generation, and strengthen the friendship and understanding between China and Canada.

from: cctv.com (for further info and pictures)

Beijing Olympics 2008 are not the first Games to provoke protest

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The Olympics, politics and protest have been intertwined almost since the very birth of the modern Games in 1896, expressed through banishments, boycotts, demonstrations and terrorism.
In that sense, the current demonstrations protesting China’s hosting of the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing is nothing new.
Tibet is currently the focus of attention, given the violence that broke out earlier this month. It touched directly on the Games last Monday when protesters smeared with fake blood appeared at the Olympic torch-lighting ceremony in Greece.
But it’s not the first time the Beijing Games have been targeted. Last August, the media freedom group Reporters Without Borders released a poster showing an alternate take on the Olympic rings: Five interlocking handcuffs, with the caption “Beijing 2008.
The group was trying to highlight repressive media policies in China, which it calls the “world’s biggest prison for journalists and cyber-dissidents.”
Activists in Canada have also used the Olympics to draw attention to their cause. Anti-poverty protesters in Vancouver have used actions against the 2010 Winter Games as a method to draw attention to their cause. Alberta’s Lubicon Cree, then fighting for a land claims settlement, protested at the 1988 Calgary Winter Games.
All those were small beer, however, compared to the Munich massacre. In 1972, Palestinian extremists kidnapped and murdered 11 members of Israel’s Olympic team during the Summer Games. A bomb rocked celebrations at the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta.
Protests from interest groups and terrible acts by extremists are one thing, but the International Olympic Committee has also banned countries from participating as a political statement of its own. Some countries have in turn boycotted various Games.
Here is a look back at the countries that have been banned from participating over the years.
* 1920 and 1924: Germany wasn’t allowed to send teams as punishment for its role in the First World War.
* 1923: The Soviet Union was banned over the Bolshevik revolution; the USSR and its East European allies didn’t participate again until 1952.
* 1964: South Africa was banished over its apartheid policies.
* 1972: Rhodesia kicked out of Olympics.
* 1976: Taiwan was excluded after Canada would not recognize the island as the Republic of China.
* 2000: Afghanistan was banned in protest over the then-Taliban government’s policies towards women.

Boycotts
* 1936: Many countries considered boycotting the Berlin Summer Games to protest the National Socialist government led by Adolf Hitler, who had started to implement his racist policies. Forty-nine countries still attended. U.S. African-American sprinter Jesse Owens made a statement of sort by winning four gold medals.
* 1956: The Melbourne Summer Games were preceded by two major conflicts: The Suez Crisis and the Soviet Union’s invasion of Hungary. Egypt, Iraq and Lebanon boycotted over the Suez Crisis, and the Netherlands, Spain and Switzerland boycotted over Hungary. Fifty-seven countries participated altogether.
* 1976: Twenty-six African nations boycotted Montreal’s Summer Games. They were angry over the IOC’s decision to let New Zealand participate after that country’s rugby team toured South Africa.
* 1980: The United States led a boycott of the Moscow Summer Games to protest the Soviet Union’s 1979 invasion of Afghanistan. Sixty-one nations participated, including Canada. Eighty-one countries still attended.
* 1984: The Soviet Union boycotted the Summer Games in Los Angeles. East Germany, Cuba and 14 other countries joined them. One-hundred-and-forty countries still attended.
* 1988: North Korea, miffed at not being named a co-host of the Summer Games in Seoul, South Korea, boycotted the event. Ethiopia and Cuba joined the boycott, but 159 other countries showed up.
* 1992: Barcelona became notable for being the first Olympics in decades not to be subjected to a boycott. One-hundred-sixty-nine countries showed up.

There is no talk yet about nations boycotting the Beijing Games, but there is some talk about snubbing the opening ceremonies.

Protests
Ten days before the Mexico City Summer Games in 1968, students held massive protests to criticize the Mexican government’s lavish spending on the Games while so many suffered in poverty.
Up to 500 are estimated to have died in what became known as the Tlatelolco massacre, when police and soldiers fired on the students. More than 1,000 others were injured. One-hundred-twelve countries still showed up — including Canada.
The Mexico Games also saw the iconic “Black Power” protest of American sprinters John Carlos and Tommie Smith. They stood silently on the medals podium of the 200-metre spring event while the U.S. anthem was being played. They wore black socks and raised a single black gloved fist in the air. To put the event in some cultural context, legendary singer James Brown released “Say It Loud (I’m Black and I’m Proud)” that year — and civil rights leader Martin Luther King had been assassinated that spring.
The two athletes were kicked out of the Olympics. Back home, the media savaged them, and the U.S. Olympic Committee banned them from future Games.
The Olympic charter sternly reads: “No kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas.”
Steve Keogh, communications manager for the Canadian Olympic Committee, told CTV.ca that Canada has no policy on athletes issuing political statements beyond the Olympic charter.
“Outside the venues, they are free to do whatever they want under the laws of that host country,” he said.
Asked if Canadian athletes have ever violated the charter in the way that Smith and Carlos did, Keogh said, “I don’t know of one that comes to mind for Canada.”
He added: “We respect every athlete’s freedom of expression. It is their right, and we respect that.”

from: ctv.ca (ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080329/olympic_protest_080329/20080329/)

Big-name players catch Olympic fever

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Although the 2008 season is barely three months old, Swiss world No. 1 Roger Federer and other leading players are already turning their thoughts towards the Beijing Olympics in August.
For Federer, the Olympic Games are close to the grand slams in importance while Australian Open champion Novak Djokovic believes they might rank even higher because they take place only once every four years.
American Lindsay Davenport will never forget the stirring memories of her triumphant debut at the Atlanta Games in 1996 and Russian Svetlana Kuznetsova says she would prefer to win an Olympic gold medal this year over any of the grand slams.
“For me, it’s a big priority of the year,” Federer, a winner of 12 grand slam titles, said.
“The (ATP) tour actually bases its entire schedule around the Olympics Games and I follow that scheme. I want to play in this year’s Olympics and I’m going to be there.
“I’ve already had two great experiences,” the 26-year-old Swiss added, referring to 2000 Sydney when he lost the bronze-medal match to Frenchman Arnaud Di Pasquale and Athens in 2004 when he lost to Czech Tomas Berdych in the second round.
Serbian world No. 3 Djokovic, who clinched his eighth ATP title by beating American Mardy Fish at the Pacific Life Open final last weekend, agrees.
“I rate them (the Games) probably on the top, one of the tops for sure,” the 20-year-old said. “I mean come on, it’s the Olympics. You get to play grand slams every year, four grand slams. The Olympics you get to play one time in four years and who knows what will happen in four years for us?
“So I will not risk that and I’ll be very honoured and privileged to participate in such an event, an event with the most tradition in sport.”
Russian former world No. 1 Maria Sharapova has long cherished competing at the Olympics.
“It’s been a dream of mine ever since I was a little girl, so it’s been one of my priorities for a very long time,” the 20-year-old said. “One of the things I’m really looking forward to is the opening ceremony and walking with all the athletes from my country in front of thousands of people.”
Davenport was a gold medallist in the women’s singles at the 1996 Atlanta Games, two years before she clinched the first of her three grand slam titles.
“It was the first big thing I won and a huge honour,” the former Wimbledon, US Open and Australian Open champion said.
“When I won the US Open in 1998, it seemed to give me more validity as a player. Those two were certainly big turning points in my career and it’s hard to compare them. I can’t wait to go back in early August.
“My best memory is winning the gold but I always think back to the opening ceremonies in ‘96. The US were the last country to come out and I was with Mary Joe (Fernandez) and Monica (Seles), two of my best friends on the tour.
“It was a moment I’ll never forget. We were so excited and giddy and, like, pure joy. Sitting there, we were all crying when Muhammad Ali lit the torch. I always kind of think back to that moment.”
Kuznetsova was brought up in a family where the Olympic Games represented the ultimate in sport. “For me it’s very important,” said the 22-year-old, who won her first grand slam title at the 2004 US Open. “It’s like a grand slam or even maybe more important than that.”
Asked whether she would prefer to win Wimbledon or an Olympic gold medal this year, Kuznetsova replied: “Olympic gold medal. No question.”

from: xinhuanet.com 

BEIJING 2008: Final Coordination Commission Visit

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With the Beijing 2008 Olympic Torch Relay now underway and anticipation building for the Games themselves in August, the IOC’s Coordination Commission for the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games will be in the host city of Beijing this week for its final review of the Beijing 2008 project. Led by Commission Chairman Hein Verbruggen, the members of the Commission will meet with their Beijing Organising Committee (BOCOG) counterparts to fully understand the state of BOCOG’s progress as the Games approach and also to help guide BOCOG as they finalise their preparations and operations.

Highest Standard
This will be the tenth visit of the full Commission to Beijing and marks the closing chapter of seven years of close collaboration between BOCOG and this expert IOC group. During that time, the members of the Commission have been able to assist and monitor BOCOG, as they collaborated towards putting on top-class Games for the athletes of the world in August 2008. And this visit will be no different as the Commission works with BOCOG down to the wire to ensure that the services that the athletes, media, spectators and National Olympic Committees (NOC) receive will be up to the highest standard possible.

ANOC and Executive Board
Following closely on the heels of the Coordination Commission, Beijing will also host the final General Assembly of the Association of National Olympic Commitees (ANOC) before the Games, as well as a meeting of the IOC’s Executive Board. The ANOC meeting will give the NOCs the opportunity to learn directly from BOCOG what has been planned for Games time and also to ask BOCOG any outstanding questions that they may still have ahead of the opening of the Olympic Village in July.

Beijing 2008
The Games of the XXIX Olympiad – Beijing 2008 will take place from 8 to 24 August 2008. The Games in Beijing will play host to the 28 summer sports currently on the Olympic programme. Approximately 10,500 athletes are expected to participate in the Games with around 20,000 accredited media bringing the Games to the world.

from: olympic.org

FM spokesman: Follow the Olympic spirit and do not politicize the Games

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Commenting on French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s comment that “all options are open” regarding an Olympics boycott, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman says the world should follow the Olympic spirit and not politicize the Games.
Spokesman Qin Gang said Wednesday afternoon that the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games is a grand event not only for the Chinese people, but also people across the whole world. China hopes to enhance understanding, friendship and cooperation with the world through this sports event.

We believe that the Beijing Olympic Games will certainly achieve success with the support of the world people,” he said.
from: news.xinhuanet.com

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