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  Crowds in Beijing cheer Olympic torch arrival
Last updated: 2008-08-06


Crowds in Beijing cheer Olympic torch arrival
2008-08-06

Category
Bird's Nest National Stadium
Nations
China
City
Beijing
Metropolitan
Beijing
People
Yao Ming
Zhang Yimou
Event
2008 Beijing Olympics Torch
Company
Lenovo
Category
Tian'anmen Square
Source
(AP)
BEIJING - The Olympic flame approached the final destination of its long and sometimes contentious global tour Wednesday, greeted by rapturous crowds in the Chinese capital two days before it officially launches the Summer Games.

The arrival of the torch marks one of the final steps in China's seven years of preparations for the games that have cost billions of dollars, and one which Beijing hopes will serve as the country's symbolic debut as a modern world power.

The torch will tour Beijing before ending up at Friday's opening ceremony for the games. It will be carried by a diverse group, including China's first astronaut in space Yang Liwei, movie director Zhang Yimou and basketball superstar Yao Ming.

"I'm very happy to be here," said Yang before the relay kicked off from the Forbidden City, home of Chinese emperors since the 15th century.

"That the torch is finally in Beijing is a realization of a dream we've had for a hundred years," Yang said, minutes before he took up the flame as its first torchbearer.

Basketball star Yao Ming carried the torch out of China's symbolic Tiananmen Gate, below the portrait of Chairman Mao.

Overseas, the torch relay was disrupted by protests or conducted under extremely heavy security since it left Greece on March 24, turning an event that should have built up excitement for the games into something of a public relations disaster for the hosts.

The protests have mostly been in response to China's crackdown in March on anti-government riots in Tibet and to more general concerns over human rights issues in China.

On Wednesday, a pro-Tibet group said police detained four activists after they unfurled banners outside the Beijing National Stadium, site of the opening ceremony.

Three men and one woman from Students for a Free Tibet climbed two electricity poles in front of the stadium, dubbed the Bird's Nest, and unfurled the two banners at dawn, said Lhadon Tethong, the New York-based group's executive director.

One banner said "Tibet will be free" and the other said "One World, One Dream" -- the slogan for the Beijing Olympics -- with the words "Free Tibet" in Chinese.

After an hour, fire trucks pulled up and the protesters were peacefully led away by police and members of the internal security force, Tethong said.

"We have not had any contact with them because their phones are off," she said.

Sun Weide, the spokesman for the Beijing Olympics organizing committee, did not answer his telephone. Zhao Min, from the Beijing Public Security Bureau spokesman's office, said officials were trying to confirm the incident and had no immediate comment.

The torch arrived back in the capital late Tuesday, after an emotional run in Sichuan province, the site of China's deadly May 12 earthquake which killed almost 70,000 people and left some 5 million homeless.

It was paraded Tuesday through about eight miles of the provincial capital of Chengdu. Hours later, a powerful aftershock struck other parts of Sichuan province in western China and nearby provinces, but it was not felt in Chengdu.

The original route of the torch in Chengdu was altered, taking it through an industrial part of the city rather than a more historic section that houses Tibetan communities, apparently out of concern that anti-government protests could mar the ceremony. Deadly riots against the Beijing government broke out in the capital of neighboring Tibet in March, and pro-Tibet activists have disrupted the torch relay overseas.

A huge stage was set up at the Forbidden City's Meridian Gate for lion dancers and other traditional dance performances. Despite the muggy heat, thousands of people lined Chang An Avenue, which runs through the heart of Beijing, to cheer on the torchbearers.

"I'm just so happy I couldn't sleep last night," said Liu Yuzhen, a 54-year-old retiree who was one of the dancers. "It's our torch and it's in Beijing. It's a chance of a hundred years and it's finally here."

From the Forbidden City, the torch was to pass landmarks such as the futuristic egg-shaped National Center for the Performing Arts and Tiananmen Square. The expansive square is iconic for its symbolism as the seat of the communist government, but also was the focus of pro-democracy demonstrations in 1989 that were violently crushed by security forces.

The crowd in Tiananmen square was small and strictly controlled in ordered lines as the torch wound its way around Mao's mausoleum. The only people allowed in were media and organized groups of supporters, mostly from major Olympic sponsors Lenovo and Coca-Cola, who shouted "Go China! Go Olympics!" and waved corporate flags.

"I feel the Olympics will help China develop, because China used to be so closed, and it gives an opportunity for the whole world to see China," said Weng Jianming, a 21-year old student at the Beijing University of Forestry.

He got up at 3 a.m. to be bused to the square but it was worth it to catch a glimpse of Yao Ming, he said.

The torch will end the day's relay at the Temple of Heaven in south Beijing, where the emperor went to perform sacrifices for a good harvest. The Beijing leg will involve 841 torchbearers over three days and will also visit the Great Wall at Badaling, a site where prehistoric fossils of Peking Man were discovered.

Security was tight along the torch run and Tiananmen Square was secured by armed police officers. The only people allowed onto the square were media and special guests.

Organizers have been on heightened alert since an attack in the country's restive Muslim region in the west killed 16 policemen on Monday.

On Tuesday, International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge said the committee was discussing whether to eliminate international relays. He said the IOC would retain its tradition of lighting the Olympic flame in Ancient Olympia and starting the torch relay in Greece, but may limit flame processions to domestic routes within Olympic host countries.

___

Associated Press writer Audra Ang contributed to this report from Beijing.

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