International Torch Relay May Be Scrapped
Protests Force Olympic Officials To Begrudgingly Consider Eliminating All Non-China Runs
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Play CBS Video Video 'Free Tibet' On The Golden Gate "CBS News RAW": In advance of the Olympic torch relay's San Francisco stop, protestors draped "Free Tibet" posters from a side span on the iconic Golden Gate Bridge.
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Video Protests Chase Torch In France French police have had to extinguish the Olympic torch twice on its run through Paris due to clashes with Tibet supporters protesting China's human rights record. Charlie D'Agata reports.
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Three people protesting China's human rights record and the impending arrival of the Olympic torch climbed up the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, Monday, April 7, 2008, and tied Tibetan flags and two banners to its cables. (AP)
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Security men tackle a protester, left, as Stephane Diagana, right, the 400-meter world champion in 1997 who is now president of France's national athletics league, carries the Olympic torch at the beginning of its relay from the first floor of the Eiffel tower in Paris, Monday, April 7, 2008. Security officials extinguished the Olympic flame amid heavy protests during the torch relay in Paris. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)
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Police officers apprehend an anti-China, pro-Tibet demonstrator, waving a Tibetan flag, as he tried to interrupt the Olympic torch parade shortly after its beginning near the Eiffel tower in Paris, Monday, April 7, 2008. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus)
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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)
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Two of three demonstrators protesting China's human rights record and the impending arrival of the Olympic torch tie Tibetan flags and two banners to the cables of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, Monday, April 7, 2008. (AP)
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Photo Essay Paris Protests Douse Torch Olympic torch extinguished at least three times amid Anti-China protests.
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Timeline Tibet Unrest A look at recent unrest in Tibet and western China and some of the history behind it.
Protesters angry with China are taking out their frustrations on the Olympic relay and have dubbed the torch the "Flame of Shame," reports CBS News correspondent Ben Tracy.
Meanwhile, International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge said the committee would consider ending the international leg of the Beijing Olympic torch relay because of anti-Chinese protests.
Rogge told The Associated Press he was "deeply saddened" by violent protests in London and Paris and concerned about the upcoming torch relay in San Francisco, where activists expressed fears Monday that the torch's planned route through Tibet would lead to arrests and violent measures by Chinese officials trying to stifle dissent.
The flame arrived in San Francisco shortly before 4 a.m. Tuesday and was put in a vehicle to be whisked to an undisclosed location, San Francisco Olympic Torch Relay Committee spokesman David Perry said. No protesters were seen at the airport, but security was heightened because a several demonstrations were planned before the torch's six-mile relay Wednesday, including a relay supporting Tibetan independence.
"We treated it like a head of state visit," airport spokesman Mike McCaron said.
Three people climbed the Golden Gate Bridge on Monday and tied the Tibetan flag and two banners to its cables. The banners read "One World One Dream. Free Tibet," and "Free Tibet 08."
The bridge protest's organizers said they would remain faithful to their mission of protesting peacefully during the torch relay. They said they wanted to take full advantage of the international spotlight to get their message out.
"This is a life-or-death situation for Tibetans," said Yangchen Lhamo, an organizer of the banner-hanging who is on the board of directors of Students for a Free Tibet.
Also Monday, Olympic organizers canceled the final leg of the Paris run after demonstrators scaled the Eiffel Tower, grabbed for the flame and forced security officials to repeatedly snuff out the torch and transport it by bus past demonstrators. China condemned the protests as "despicable" but vowed to continue the relay to the end.
Rogue said the IOC's executive board would discuss ending the international leg in a meeting Friday.
After San Francisco, the torch is scheduled to travel to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and then to a dozen other countries. It is scheduled to enter mainland China on May 4 for the host country's portion of the relay.
San Francisco officials said they were developing a plan that strikes a balance between protesters' rights to express their views and the city's ability to host a safe torch ceremony.
U.S. Olympic Committee Chairman Peter Ueberroth said in a statement the event was "an important moment for the city to show its character, hospitality and commitment to peace and tolerance."
"It must provide a proper forum for the peaceful expression of opinions and dissent. And it must safely and respectfully welcome the flame and honor the U.S. athletes and other participants who will carry the torch," Ueberroth said.
Mayor Gavin Newsom and the police department said they reserved the right to adjust the flame's route, slated to run along the San Francisco Bay, if necessary. The air space above the city will be restricted during the relay, a federal aviation spokesman said.
Nathan Ballard, a spokesman for Newsom, dismissed rumors that the relay would be canceled. Newsom met with Chinese Ambassador Zhou Wenzhong on Monday afternoon to discuss security measures for the relay, Ballard said.
"It was a good meeting and they discussed their shared desire to try to limit the kind of chaos that we have seen in London and Paris," he said.
Lorri Coppola, a champion racewalker whose body is being slowly shut down by Lou Gehrig's disease, or Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, has met with the Dalai Lama in the past and understands the protesters' motives.
"They are doing it in the free countries because they know what might happen should they try to protest in China!" she wrote by e-mail, as the disease has cost her the ability to speak.
She says she's afraid of getting hurt if activists get out of control, especially given her weakened condition.
Activists have been protesting along the torch route since the flame embarked on its 85,000-mile journey from Ancient Olympia in Greece to the Aug. 8-24 Beijing Olympics.
The Golden Gate climbers, who wore helmets and harnesses as they made their way above the famed span, were suspended about 150 feet above traffic. They later climbed down and bridge workers cut down the signs.
In all, seven people were charged with conspiracy and causing a public nuisance, with the three climbers facing additional charges of trespassing, said Mary Ziegenbien, a spokeswoman with the California Highway Patrol.
The Chinese, who have been hoping to use the games as a showpiece for their newfound prosperity and power, have dismissed the protestors as a small group of Tibetan separatists. But this torch-relay fiasco may well unsettle the big Olympic corporate sponsors, reports CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips. The top five alone spent half a billion dollars on the last games and are poised to spend a lot more this time. The risk of being tainted by association with Chinese policy has become a real one for those companies.
"They are trying very hard not to seem like the bad guy and I think a lot of the companies really do sympathize with the cause. But they are really not sure how to go about this because you don't want to tick off the Chinese government," says Judann Pollack, managing editor of Advertising Age.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 55 CommentsIf you support the aforementioned protests and rallies, but not these... it is such a glaring contradiction I dont know what to say
Posted by LoCoPyRo at 05:13 PM : Apr 08, 2008
+ report abuse
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I agree about the freedom of speech and expression BUT i dont agree if it agrivates the issue at hand..misguiding the solutions and taking it deep down the wrong road..kinda like saving africa by holding concerts..ITS NOT GOING ANYWHERE..and protesting the olympics is that same thing...
He''s a heathen, he belongs to hell.
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who has more power? Jesus or the Pope? Who has more power? the reincarnation of a God or the prime minister you elected? Why don''t YOU think before you type.
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who has more power? Jesus or the Pope? Who has more power? the reincarnation of a God or the prime minister you elected? Why don''t YOU think before you type.
you seem to know nothing about Tibetan Buddhism. upon repeated efforts by the current Dalai Lama to reduce his own political position, he has come under pressure from Tibetans globally as they find it unacceptable as they see him as a God like figure. The Tibetan government in exile in Dharmasala, India conducts elections every 5 years to choose its government representatives, and elections are carried out on three continents. think before you type.
If you support the aforementioned protests and rallies, but not these... it is such a glaring contradiction I dont know what to say
As for the torch ceremonies, the protest that are being displayed is no more than a knee-jerk. From all that I have read and seen, there is much fault to be laid about on both sides. Outside interference in China''s internal problems could very well be counterproductive, not to mention that it should not be the business of other countries to meddle in the internal affairs of another government. When the citizens of China, or any other country for that matter, decide that they have had enough of the present regime, then change will come about.
Now the Summer Olympics in China is a Glaring Mistake and that''s that.
The Chinese started this by responding to the initial peaceful protest with lethal police and military force. If the protesting Tibetans were indeed as evil as claimed by the central China government don''t you think they would have cranked that into their propaganda machine?
hmmmm? When is the last time the Tibetan people got to vote for a Dali Llama? Shouldn''t they be free to choose? I agree with all those things you just said. You just have not made the case that the Dali Lllama represents those ideals? History does not support this view either.
This is a video that any popular news agency will feel disgraceful to show you. Go to
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x4ztb8_la-flamme-olympique-chahutee-a-pari_news
to see with your own eyes.
You can also google with "rue89 la flamme olympique chahutee a paris" on the net to find the clip.
Posted by bdude01 at 11:10 AM : Apr 08, 2008
And I bet you voted for Doofus twice in the Presidential elections.
I do exercise my right to vote!
Are we meant to uphold the gods and goddesses of Ancient Greece, and embrace the sacred flame tradition of their priests and priestesses?
Or are we supposed to follow the more recent tradition of the burning torch relay, invented by the Nazis for the 1936 Berlin Olympics?
What suckers we are, to fall for this mushy idea of an apparently holy flame, given a boost every four years by governments, business and the International Olympic Committee!
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