LONDON, April 6, 2008

Protesters Snarl Olympic Flame Route

Police Scuffle With Pro-Tibet Demonstrators During Torch Relay In London, Dozens Arrested

  • A police officer tackles a demonstrator during the Olympic torch relay in London, April 6, 2008. Police scuffled with protesters as Olympians and celebrities carried the Olympic torch through snowy London during a chaotic relay Sunday.

    A police officer tackles a demonstrator during the Olympic torch relay in London, April 6, 2008. Police scuffled with protesters as Olympians and celebrities carried the Olympic torch through snowy London during a chaotic relay Sunday.  (AP Photo/Yui Mok)

  • Timeline Tibet Unrest

    A look at recent unrest in Tibet and western China and some of the history behind it.

(AP)  Protesters challenging China's policies in Tibet and Darfur tried Sunday to extinguish the Olympic torch as it completed its winding and sometimes-chaotic journey through London.

The biggest protests since the flame was lit two weeks ago in Greece underscored human rights concerns and tarnished the Asian powerhouse's plans for a harmonious display of pomp and sport ahead of the summer games in Beijing.

Frantic organizers shuffled the relay's participants and made on-the-spot changes on the course to avoid confrontations with demonstrators, who waved Tibetan flags, clashed with police and grew bolder as the event progressed. Roughly 2,000 police officers kept the flame moving in face of repeated onslaughts.

Police say 37 people have been arrested for a range of public order offenses.

Along the route, hundreds of protesters jeered the hand-offs and chanted "Free Tibet!" "Stop killing in Tibet!" "China, talk to Dalai Lama!"' and waved placards condemning the country's role in Darfur.

"They've called the torch relay a journey of harmony, but on the ground in Tibet they are shooting and killing peaceful Tibetan protesters," said Matt Whitticase, a spokesman for the London-based Free Tibet Campaign. "We want to use the momentum gathered over this weekend to really press our case that the torch should not be allowed to be paraded triumphantly by China."

Activists demonstrating against China's human rights record and a recent crackdown in Tibet have been protesting along the torch route since the start of the flame's 85,000-mile odyssey from Ancient Olympia in Greece to Beijing, the host of the 2008 Summer Olympics.

The torch's global tour - the longest in Olympic history - is part of China's drive to highlight its growing economic and political power through the Olympics. But it also has offered protest groups abundant opportunity to draw attention to their concerns.

"There was definitely a bit of an edge," British tennis player Tim Henman, one of the torchbearers, told The Associated Press.

The trouble began early in the day as a spring snowfall uncharacteristically blanketed the capital. Demonstrators attempted to board a relay bus shortly after five-time Olympic gold medalist Steve Redgrave started the procession at Wembley Stadium.

In west London, a protester tried to grab the torch out of the hands of a diminutive children's television host, forcing police to briefly stop the procession. Another demonstrator tried to snuff out the flame with what appeared to be a fire extinguisher. Others simply threw themselves out of the crowd and into the flame's path.

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown briefly greeted the torch when it arrived outside his Downing Street residence as pro-Tibet demonstrators and police clashed yards away near Britain's Parliament buildings. Brown never handled the torch, but watched as Olympic gold medalist Denise Lewis handed it to Paralympic hopeful Ali Jawad.

Demonstrators swelled in number near the spot where Chinese Ambassador Fu Ying had been expected to carry the Olympic torch. Instead, Fu emerged with the torch in the heart of London's Chinatown, managing to jog unhindered before handing it over to the next participant.

The ugliest scenes occurred between Trafalgar Square and the iconic Big Ben clock tower. A dozen protesters charged the torch and police reacted with force, shoving aside anyone who appeared to threaten the torch's path.

"Everyone was running at (me). It was a bit weird," said Scott Earley Jr., 17, the torchbearer at the time. "The police had it covered. They told me when to go and what to do."

About 100 demonstrators managed to briefly impede the flame's progress by surrounding it near St. Paul's Cathedral, forcing police to put the flame-bearer on a bus before continuing.

Some protesters complained about police tactics. Authorities corralled Tibetan protesters in metal barricades across from Bloomsbury Square, not far from the British Museum, forcing anyone with Tibetan paraphernalia into the area.

"It really hurts," said Passang Dolne, 27, a Tibetan national who works as a nurse in London. "It feels like we are restrained like a sheep in a barn. We are not allowed to get out."

Meanwhile, Chinese nationals who gathered roughly 100 yards away were allowed freedom of movement as they waved Chinese flags distributed by the Chinese Embassy and the Bank of China.

"We don't like the Tibet people who use this time against the Chinese. It's not a proper venue," said Ting Yan, 27, who is originally from southwest China but is in London working for a telecommunications firm.

But some, like Chinese student Yanning Yang, who traveled from outside the capital to support the torch relay, said protest was inevitable.

"Whatever the protests is, you can't be undermined in violence," she said. "We accept criticism and there is a lot we need to improve."

Lianna Hulbert, 23, of London, who carried a placard denouncing China's support for the Sudanese regime, said the demonstrators were doing what others cannot elsewhere.

"This is a place where people can be the voice of the voiceless," she said.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by cfeae April 9, 2008 4:34 PM EDT
am always amazed by people like pfd572 or some crazy dudes like iamauto who clearly found himself/herself in the wrong place. It is funny to see those excited words from pfd572. I am convicted that some people are trying to making themselves feel good by saying stupid things. It is funnier for me that americans love to think of themselves as some kind of saviors for others. Can you imagine yourself standing in the middle of a busy street in any of the Chinese cities which show prosperities beyond your imagination and preaching to Chinese people that you are there to save them? Chinese people don''t need you, really, really. Save yourself, people, you have enough problems right here in the states. Leave others alone, specially the ones you can''t touch. Just when you feel like express yourself about this matter, don''t.
Reply to this comment
by cfeae April 9, 2008 4:32 PM EDT
am always amazed by people like pfd572 or some crazy dudes like iamauto who clearly found himself/herself in the wrong place. It is funny to see those excited words from pfd572. I am convicted that some people are trying to making themselves feel good by saying stupid things. It is funnier for me that americans love to think of themselves as some kind of saviors for others. Can you imagine yourself standing in the middle of a busy street in any of the Chinese cities which show prosperities beyond your imagination and preaching to Chinese people that you are there to save them? Chinese people don''t need you, really, really. Save yourself, people, you have enough problems right here in the states. Leave others alone, specially the ones you can''t touch. Just when you feel like express yourself about this matter, don''t.
Reply to this comment
by cfeae April 9, 2008 4:31 PM EDT
I am always amazed by people like pfd572 or some crazy dudes like iamauto who clearly found himself/herself in the wrong place. It is funny to see those excited words from pfd572. I am convicted that some people are trying to making themselves feel good by saying stupid things. It is funnier for me that americans love to think of themselves as some kind of saviors for others. Can you imagine yourself standing in the middle of a busy street in any of the Chinese cities which show prosperities beyond your imagination and preaching to Chinese people that you are there to save them? Chinese people don''t need you, really, really. Save yourself, people, you have enough problems right here in the states. Leave others alone, specially the ones you can''t touch. Just when you feel like express yourself about this matter, don''t.
Reply to this comment
by cfeae April 9, 2008 4:30 PM EDT
I am always amazed by people like pfd572 or some crazy dudes like iamauto who clearly found himself/herself in the wrong place. It is funny to see those excited words from pfd572. I am convicted that some people are trying to making themselves feel good by saying stupid things. It is funnier for me that americans love to think of themselves as some kind of saviors for others. Can you imagine yourself standing in the middle of a busy street in any of the Chinese cities which show prosperities beyond your imagination and preaching to Chinese people that you are there to save them? Chinese people don''t need you, really, really. Save yourself, people, you have enough problems right here in the states. Leave others alone, specially the ones you can''t touch. Just when you feel like express yourself about this matter, don''t.
Reply to this comment
by cfeae April 9, 2008 4:27 PM EDT
I am always amazed by people like pfd572 or some crazy dudes like iamauto who clearly found himself/herself in the wrong place. It is funny to see those excited words from pfd572. I am convicted that some people are trying to making themselves feel good by saying stupid things. It is funnier for me that americans love to think of themselves as some kind of saviors for others. Can you imagine yourself standing in the middle of a busy street in any of the Chinese cities which show prosperities beyond your imagination and preaching to Chinese people that you are there to save them? Chinese people don''t need you, really, really. Save yourself, people, you have enough problems right here in the states. Leave others alone, specially the ones you can''t touch. Just when you feel like express yourself about this matter, don''t.
Reply to this comment
by ioweign April 8, 2008 10:49 AM EDT
These protests are stupid, lame, absurd, and misguided. For the first time in my life, I feel bad for China. All these years of work and preparation about to be ruined by the one tenth of one percent of the population too stupid to learn the truth about Tibet, and also so stupid as to associate politics with the Olympics.

Posted by michaelt302 at 02:18 AM : Apr 07, 2008


I am sad for your parents...

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by glock4me April 7, 2008 11:09 PM EDT
Spray down the protesters with gasoline and see if they still run towards the torch. Regardless of the protesters decision, problem solved.
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 April 7, 2008 10:56 PM EDT
Do some research people, Two sides to every story.


http://www.michaelparenti.org/Tibet.html
Reply to this comment
by jackmerkel April 7, 2008 3:50 PM EDT
The Chinese government is realy dam lucky just when it facing huge internal threats like rising inflation, stock market collapse, diminishing export... the whole world is supporting it by turning their internal anger into the Tibetans and the west...
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by gunownerdan April 7, 2008 3:19 PM EDT
Nazi Germany had the olympics in 1936 so why shouldn''t communist China have theirs?
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by jazz_jeff2 April 7, 2008 10:49 AM EDT
The Olympics are about sportsmanship - how can there be sportsmanship when the world turns a blind eye to oppression and torture in Tibet? Don''t go spouting about its just sport - sportsmanship means being equal and fair to your fellow humans - that applies on and off the field. What - we can see while we are on the field and pretend to be blind when our fellow humans are off it? Don''t disgust me! "Genocide Olympics" - your not wanted.
Reply to this comment
by pfd572 April 7, 2008 10:27 AM EDT
cc cbsnews: I didn''t read it as an attack against the Chinese people, but the government and those people who perpetuate the crimes and suppression of the Chinese people.
sistatee and iamauto: another ignorant, and woefully pathetic comment from woefully pathetic people.
veteran999999: spread the word. Millions are with you.
Reply to this comment
by pfd572 April 7, 2008 10:17 AM EDT
michael302: You can''t separate the politics from the games, stupid (response in kind). The Chinese have committed numerous human rights crimes in preparation for the games, so the politics are part and parcel of the games. They have locked up dissidents, used forced labor, imprisoned the homeless, impaired and mentally handicapped to trick the world into believing all is wonderful in Beijing. Fortunately, except for insensitive and moronic idiots like you, it hasn''t worked. People aren''t fooled. Tibet is just the rallying point, it isn''t the exception. Check you facts, your ignorance is offensive and enormous.
Reply to this comment
by pfd572 April 7, 2008 10:11 AM EDT
michaelt302: its attitudes like yours that allowed atrocities and injustices to succeed. When people have stood up to and said ''no more'', they accomplish a great deal. Civil Rights, end to apartheid, end of slavery, withdrawal from Viet Nam, end of child labor in the US, resignation and prosecution of corrupt officials, to name a few. Its also how atrocities are allowed to happen: Hitler, Dafur, Somalia, Jim Crow, slavery, suppression of women''s rights, to name a few. Apathy is cowardly and you should be ashamed and ridiculed, as well as shunned.

BOYCOTT THE OLYMPICS, TURN OFF THE GAMES
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by iamauto April 7, 2008 5:01 AM EDT
Let''s drop a nuclear bomb in Beijing!
Those chinese hans are unworthy to have human rights.
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by sistatee-2009 April 7, 2008 4:10 AM EDT
New Olympic sport: Protester bashing.
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by ee_cbsnews April 7, 2008 2:56 AM EDT
SharnCedar - Please be responsible for your free speech - criticize the chinese government but NOT the chinese people (2 billion chinese people and Millions of Chinese American) - GOVERNMENT does NOT equate to PEOPLE, not all Americans approve the casualties in Iraq - 4000 soldiers and 100,000 innocent iraqi civilians. SharnCedar - what you are doing will only encourage discrimination and injustice to PEOPLE, not government
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by vet999999 April 7, 2008 12:49 AM EDT
Well, the way to impact this is to boycot the olympics. Do not watch them on TV. The advertisers will pull out and take their money with them.
Reply to this comment
by beehive21-2009 April 7, 2008 12:09 AM EDT
Why has the IOC awarded a communist country the Olympics when their are so many countries bidding for it with rational governments ?
Reply to this comment
by listener2000-2009 April 6, 2008 9:04 PM EDT
CIA pays Dalai lama $186000 annually, and 2 million + to Tibetan in exile, with additional millions for %u201Cdemocracy activities" about Tibet. (Los Angeles Times, 15 September 1998; and New York Times, 1 October 1998)
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