Olympic Flame Travels Australia In Secret
Torch Is Whisked Away To Hidden Location To Avoid Anti-China Protests Down Under
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Chinese security personnel escort the Olympic flame in a container upon arrival in Canberra, Australia, April. 23, 2008. (AP Photo/Rob Griffith)
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Photos Olympic Torch Odyssey There have been some bumps in the road as the torch makes its way from Olympia to Beijing.
Yard-high fences were being erected along the route where 80 runners will carry the torch through the Australian capital on Thursday.
Hundreds of police will guard the torch in Canberra to prevent the type of interruptions that have plagued the relay in cities including Paris and London during its global march toward the Beijing Olympics in August.
Protests over China's human rights record and its crackdown on anti-government activists in Tibet have turned this year's event into one of the most contentious in recent history. Many countries, including Australia, have responded by modifying routes and boosting security.
Police in Canberra sought to end lingering confusion about the role of Chinese security agents in the relay, with police chief Mike Phelan saying three Chinese "flame attendants" will always be near the torch but will have no official security role.
The blue-clad Chinese officials became notorious following claims they acted like thugs during chaotic protest scenes in London earlier this month.
Chinese ambassador to Australia Zhang Junsai told Channel Nine television news Tuesday that Chinese security officials may intervene, saying: "If the flame is attacked I believe they will use their body."
However, Australian officials said Wednesday that they had sorted out some communication issues between themselves and Chinese officials.
"All security will rest with us," Phelan said. "I don't know if I can be any clearer than that."
I don't know, and I don't want to know.
Australian relay organizer Ted Quinlan,on the flame's location
Officials said the flame's location was being kept secret between its arrival and the relay Thursday because of the threat of protests.
"I don't know, and I don't want to know," Australian relay organizer Ted Quinlan told reporters. "Originally, it was going to a hotel but there's a distinct possibility it's going to go to the embassy."
Torch bearer Lin Hatfield-Dodds withdrew from the rally Tuesday, saying the symbolism of the relay had changed after China's Tibet crackdown last month.
Other torch bearers said the Olympics were the wrong place to make political protests. Ian Thorpe, a five-time Olympic gold medalist swimmer who will carry the torch Thursday, said the protests "shouldn't be centered around a specific event."
Tibetan protests were expected Thursday, as well as pro-Chinese rallies. Both sides say they want the event to be peaceful.
Quinlan said he expected "a lot of noise" during the relay, which will thread along a 10-mile route that passes Parliament House and within 200 yards of the Chinese Embassy.
Australian police have been given special powers authorizing them to stop and search people for prohibited items such as eggs and paint bombs.
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has said police will "come down like a ton of bricks" on anyone who behaves violently or unlawfully during the relay.
After Australia, the flame will head to Nagano, Japan, where the relay has already run into problems. Officials at a historic Buddhist temple changed their minds about hosting the flame because of security concerns and unease among its monks and supporters over China's treatment of Buddhists in Tibet.
Would-Be Anti-China Protester Expelled From Mt. Everest
Nepalese authorities forced a Western climber caught with a "Free-Tibet" banner to end his climb of Mount Everest, about a week before a planned ascent by Chinese climbers carrying the Olympic torch, officials said Wednesday.
The climber, whose identity has not been released, was caught with the banner in his bags at Everest's base camp, said mountaineering officials in Nepal's capital, Katmandu. The officials did not want to be named because they are not authorized to speak to reporters.
The climber is the first to be stopped by soldiers and policemen stationed on the Nepalese side of the world's highest mountain to prevent anti-China protests during the planned torch run to the summit.
The climb, which is expected to start some time next week, will take place on the Chinese side of the mountain. But the Nepalese government, complying to pressure from Chinese government, has posted soldiers on the southern side and banned climbing near the summit between May 1-10 as a precaution.
Police and soldiers have been given orders to stop any protest on the mountain using whatever means necessary, including use of weapons, but the use of deadly force is authorized only as a last resort.
There are already dozens of mountaineers on Everest for the popular spring climbing season. Climbers spend weeks acclimatizing before attempting the 29,035-foot summit.
They will be barred from going above Camp 2 at 21,300 feet until the Chinese finish their torch run. The harsh weather on Everest usually allows only two windows of time in May - anywhere from a couple of days to a week - when conditions are favorable enough for the push to the summit.
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- The Olympic torch was lit recently in China, but it isn''t the torch the Chinese people wanted. Their torch was held aloft by their statue of the Goddess of Liberty, the one that they built. That torch was torn down, and the people were attacked and killed or jailed by the "People''s" army in Tiananmen square in 1989.
Young adults in China today know nothing of this, because the Chinese government propaganda machine has vilified the more than one hundred thousand patriots who demonstrated for freedom that day, and dismissed them as a few anti-social hooligans.
This vilification process is, of course, taking place today in China, only it is currently directed against the Tibetan demonstrators and the Dalai Lama. If the Tiananmen Square demonstrators had been successful in reforming the Chinese government, I doubt if there would have been the demonstrations in Tibet, because the people of Tibet would probably have had far fewer grievances. You can see a photo of the "Goddess of Liberty" and read about the Tiananmen Square massacre on Wikipedia- just Google: Wikipedia Tiananmen Square Massacre - Reply to this comment
- What they didn''t tell you is that there was hardly any pro-tibet protestors around and there are pro-china supporters outnumber them by at least 20:1.
- Reply to this comment
- "Yard-high fences were being erected along the route" would suggest they do not expect Olympic class hurdlers to interfere with the torch''s movement.
(hoping). . . the torch''s stay would symbolize "good will for all mankind." =======
One secret deserves another. - Reply to this comment
- Why don''t the Chinese just take the flame to a sound stage in a film studio somewhere in Beijing and create their own moon landing with it? Ha!
"Rook! Rook! We take frame to moooon!" - Reply to this comment
- Whisked away to a hidden location? Maybe the Olympic flame is going to do a tour of Australia''s caves! Or maybe they''ve taken it to D1ck Cheney''s secret hideout! Ha ha ha ha!
Use that flame to light the barbee, the one with all the shrimp on it! - Reply to this comment
- Yes, the Olympic Torch, a sign of harmony and good, clean, healthy competition without political interference...............what a farce!
- Reply to this comment
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