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03/25/2008
Pro-Tibet protesters disrupt Olympic flame ceremony
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| {www.thetibetpost.com AP[Monday, March 24, 2008 17:05] ANCIENT OLYMPIA, Greece March 24 — Two men carrying black flags ran onto the field of the stadium in Ancient Olympia during Monday's flame-lighting ceremony for the Beijing Olympics, evading massive security aimed at preventing such disruptions amid China's crackdown in Tibet.
A RSF demonstrator carrying a black flag with handcuffs used to symbolize the five Olympics rings, runs behind Liu Qi, the president of Beijing's Olympics Organizing Committee who speaks in Ancient Olympia, Greece, during the Olympic flame lighting ceremony, in this television frame grab, Monday, March 24, 2008. The incident occurred Monday while Liu Qi, president of the Beijing Olympics organizing committee and Beijing Communist Party Secretary, was giving a speech. The men, apparently free press advocates, were detained by police, more than 1,000 of which were deployed around the site. International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge attended the ceremony at the 2,800-year-old birthplace of the ancient games in southern Greece. The flame for the Aug. 8-24 games was lit using the sun's rays. A RSF demonstrator carrying a black flag with handcuffs used to symbolize the five Olympics rings, runs behind Liu Qi, the president of Beijing's Olympics Organizing Committee who speaks in Ancient Olympia, Greece, during the Olympic flame lighting ceremony, in this television frame grab, Monday, March 24, 2008. The banner belongs to the Paris-based journalism advocacy group Reporters Without Borders, which confirmed it was their flag. The group said three members, including the group's secretary general Robert Menard, managed to get into the ceremony without being stopped. A RSF demonstrator carrying a black flag with handcuffs used to symbolize the five Olympics rings, runs behind Liu Qi, the president of Beijing's Olympics Organizing Committee who speaks in Ancient Olympia, Greece, during the Olympic flame lighting ceremony, in this television frame grab, Monday, March 24, 2008. The death toll from the violence has varied and been impossible to confirm independently. China's reported death toll is 22 but Tibet's exiled government says 130 Tibetans were killed. Another 19 died in subsequent violence in Gansu province, it said. A RSF demonstrator carrying a black flag with handcuffs used to symbolize the five Olympics rings, runs behind Liu Qi, the president of Beijing's Olympics Organizing Committee who speaks in Ancient Olympia, Greece, during the Olympic flame lighting ceremony, in this television frame grab, Monday, March 24, 2008. Among the groups planning to protest was Students for a Free Tibet. The group's director Lhadon Tethong said officers also detained one Tibetan campaigner and a Greek photographer with him in the village of Ancient Olympia, just outside the site. "One of our colleagues saw them being dragged by about 20 police through town," Tethong said. A RSF demonstrator carrying a black flag with handcuffs used to symbolize the five Olympics rings, runs behind Liu Qi, the president of Beijing's Olympics Organizing Committee who speaks in Ancient Olympia, Greece, during the Olympic flame lighting ceremony, in this television frame grab, Monday, March 24, 2008. From Olympia, the flame will start on a 85,000-mile journey to Beijing, going through 20 countries before the Olympics open on Aug. 8. Chinese media reported that officials -- who have blamed the unrest on the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama -- were prepared to prevent a disruption of the torch relay. China's plans to take the torch through Tibet and to the top of Mount Everest have upset Tibetan activist groups, which accuse Beijing of using the event to convey a false message of harmony in the troubled Himalayan region. Chinese Communist troops occupied Tibet in 1951 and Beijing continues to rule the region with a heavy hand. Greek police drags away a Tibetan activist during a street protest in ancient Olympia against China's rule in Tibet after the ceremony to light the flame for the Beijing Games on March 24, 2008. The ritual had already been disrupted by members of the Reporters Without Borders organisation earlier. Yin is party secretary of the Tibet Mountain Climbing Team, which is participating in the Mount Everest segment of the torch relay. He spoke at a meeting organized last week by Tibet's sports bureau, whose head, Dejizhuoga, urged "intense precautions and heightened security." Tibetan activists unfurl a banner to a hotel balcony during a street protest in ancient Olympia against China's rule in Tibet after the ceremony to light the flame for the Beijing Games on March 24, 2008. The ritual had already been disrupted by members of the Reporters Without Borders organisation earlier. Greek and Chinese state television quickly cut their live broadcasts to an image away from the protesters when the incident started. Photo: AFP Mount Everest straddles the border between Nepal and Tibet. China has already begun denying mountaineers permission to climb the Tibetan side of the mountain -- a move that reflects government concerns that activists may try to disrupt its torch plans. The first torchbearer in the relay will be Greece's Alexandros Nikolaidis, who won a silver medal in taekwondo at the 2004 Athens Games. He will hand the flame to Luo Xuejuan, who won China's only swimming gold medal in Athens. |
11:27 Posted in Freedom of expression | Permalink | Comments (1) | Email this | Tags: Tibet
Comments
Je pense que le meilleur moyen d'efficacite contre la Chine c'est de ne rien acheter de produits "fabrique en Chine".Ca va leur faire mal dans le portefeuille a tout les niveaux.
Posted by: Louise Piche | 03/27/2008
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