Students for a Free Tibet photo.
Front page coverage of a San Francisco protest against the Beijing Olympic torch relay, in which a UBC student was arrested.
This morning (April 8), the Associated Press quoted International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge saying that he was “deeply saddened” by demonstrations against the 2008 Olympic torch relay, and that the IOC’s executive board would discuss cancelling the rest of the relay at its next scheduled meeting on April 11.
Demonstrations against China’s human-rights abuses and its treatment of Tibet have dogged the torch relay since the Olympic flame was first lit in Olympia, Greece, on March 24. There, Chinese officials struggled through speeches while activists shouted in protest.
Two weeks later in San Francisco, a massive pro-Tibet banners was hung from the Golden Gate Bridge even before the torch’s arrival on April 8.
A 22-year-old UBC student, Alexandra Taub, was arrested for her alleged role in the incident, Students for a Free Tibet’s national coordinator Tsering Lama told the Straight from San Francisco. At press time, Taub remained in custody, Lama said.
The Olympic torch touched down in San Francisco under tight security and a veil of secrecy. The San Francisco Chronicle reported that its only welcome party was a heavy police and media presence, which Beijing officials must have preferred to an angry mob.
The torch is scheduled to travel through downtown San Francisco tomorrow (April 9), when it is expected to be met with heavy protests.
On April 6, London’s leg of the relay was characterized by scuffling between demonstrators and police. Several attempts to douse or snatch the Olympic torch were made and several times, the torch was hurried onto a bus when things got too hairy. Approximately 35 demonstrators were arrested in the mess, according to the Daily Telegraph.
On April 7 in Paris, the next major stop for the torch, things looked even worse for Beijing. There, pro-Tibet demonstrators succeeded in cutting short the relay. As in London and Olympia, police clashed with protesters and again on numerous occasions, the torch was extinguished and hustled onto a bus for safe (and speedy) transport.
France 24 reported that scuffles broke out as soon as the torch left its starting point at the Eiffel Tower—where demonstrators had already managed to hang a large pro-Tibet banner—and a ceremony scheduled for City Hall later that day was cancelled.
Through it all, Beijing has kept its head up. Despite two PR disasters in a row and a third expected tomorrow in San Francisco—North America’s only stop for the torch—China has vowed that it will continue its relay to the very end.
Sun Weide, a spokesman for the Beijing Organizing Committee, told reporters on April 7 that the relay disruptions should be blamed on “Tibetan separatists”, the Guardian reported on its website. Weide called the demonstrations “blasphemy” and charged that the “despicable activities” of pro-Tibet activist ran against the spirit of the Games.
The Olympic torch is scheduled to be carried through China’s Tibet Autonomous Region sometime between May and August 2008, when the flame will be carried through mainland China.
In related news, U.S. Democratic presidential-hopeful Hillary Clinton joined Democratic speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi in calling for U.S. President George W. Bush to boycott the Beijing Olympics’ opening ceremonies.
On April 4, Prime Minister Stephen Harper joined other world leaders in announcing that he would not be attending the opening ceremonies. Harper told reporters that “high level government representation” from Canada would attend the event, and insisted that his absence was not a boycott or demonstration.
See also, Tibet supporters prepare for San Francisco Olympic torch relay.
An excerpt:
“For any of the athletes, protesters, journalists and even police who found themselves guided, barged or fighting with this particularly committed group of Chinese minders, the identity and function of the "boys in blue tracksuits" was of paramount importance.
“Little is known about the mysterious guards accompanying the flame on its "harmonious journey", apart from the fact that they are well-trained security officers under the remit of the Beijing Games co-ordinators, who have sweeping political powers in China.”