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Protest Disrupts Torch Relay in Paris
By Katrin Bennhold and John F. Burns
The New York Times
Monday 07 April 2008
Paris - What was supposed to be a majestic procession for the Olympic torch
through the French capital was disrupted Monday as thousands of people from
around Europe, many with Tibetan flags, massed to protest the passage of the
flame, forcing police officers to bring the torch onto a bus to try to protect
it and causing the torch to be extinguished at least once.
A police spokeswoman, speaking on condition of anonymity in accordance with
policy, said the torch went out "for technical reasons" unrelated
to the protests. CNN reported that the torch was extinguished at least twice
amid the melee, and The Associated Press said officials were forced to extinguish
the flame three times amid security concerns.
Despite massive security, at least two activists got within almost an arm's
length of the flame before they were grabbed by police officers, The A.P. reported.
Officers tackled numerous protesters to the ground and carried some away.
It was yet another unscripted moment in the passage of the Olympic flame, and
the second time in two days that the torch relay had been disrupted in a European
capital.
Some 3,000 police - on foot, horseback, roller blades, motorbikes and
even boats in the river Seine - tried to prevent a repeat of the scenes
in London on Sunday, when the torch's progression through the streets
turned into a tumult of scuffles. One man broke through a tight security cordon
in the London protests and made a failed grab for the torch, and 35 people were
arrested.
China's official Xinhua news agency on Monday condemned the "vile
misdeeds" of protesters in London.
In Beijing, a spokeswoman for the city's Olympic organizing committee
said at a hurriedly organized news conference held before the problems in France
that the relay would continue on its international route regardless of protests.
"The torch represents the Olympic spirit and people welcome the torch,"
said Wang Hui, the spokeswoman.
The news conference was apparently intended to address Sunday's protests
in London. Ms. Wang blamed the disruptions in London on a "few Tibet separatists"
and described their actions as the work of saboteurs. She said Beijing's
Olympic organizers "strongly condemned" the Tibetan protesters.
"The general public is very angry at this sabotage by a few separatists,"
she said. "During the torch relay, we met with some disturbances, but
we believe that all the peace-loving people in the world will support the torch
relay."
Jacques Rogge, the chairman of the International Olympic Committee, used a
meeting in Beijing both to criticize the London protests, but also to call for
a rapid and peaceful solution to confrontations in Tibet.
French authorities appeared determined to try to spare China - and Paris
- similar embarrassment or disorder as London, resorting to measures normally
reserved for a visiting head of state. A police helicopter circling overhead,
for example. Their efforts drew scorn from the French protesters who angrily
noted the heavy police presence.
Officers with machine guns guarded sensitive Metro exits along the 17 mile
route.
"One would almost think oneself in Lhasa," said Jean-Paul Ribes,
leader of the Support Committee of the Tibetan People in France, who was among
the thousands massed on the Trocadero square, across the Seine from the Eiffel
tower, where the flame began its passage through Paris. "It snowed last
night, now the sky is blue - and police are everywhere," Mr. Ribes
said.
Many protesters - demonstrating against China's human rights policies
in general, or for a free Tibet, or simply for a boycott of the Olympics in
Beijing - echoed a headline emblazoned across the front page of the left-wing
daily Liberation, under a picture of the Olympic rings restyled as handcuffs:
"Liberate The Olympic Games!"
Protesters came from all around Europe, including four busloads from Belgium.
Lobsang Dechen, a 29-year-old Tibetan refugee living in Belgium for 4 ½
years, said Europeans should help the cause of Tibet by boycotting the Games.
"China does not deserve to be the host," she said. "They
have to first learn to respect human rights in Tibet.'
Kevin Khayat, 19, a design student in Paris and a member of the International
Federation for Human Rights, said sports should be separated from politics.
"I am against a boycott, and in favor of human rights," he said.
He handed stickers to demonstrators urging: "Let's keep our
eyes open."
In London on Sunday, the torch was relayed on a seven-hour journey from the
new Wembley soccer stadium in the city's northwest to the principal site
for the 2012 Summer Olympics in Stratford in the east.
Along the way, numerous protesters seeking to reach the torch were wrestled
to the ground by police officers. One man carrying a fire extinguisher narrowly
failed to reach the person carrying the torch, but he set off the extinguisher
anyway, dousing police officers with foam.
The torch's London relay was the fourth stop of a global itinerary that
began last month in Greece, where pro-Tibetan demonstrators briefly interrupted
the torch's lighting and its subsequent progress through Athens.
Tibetan organizations have said they plan protests at every stop on the torch's
21-nation tour. After Paris, it moves to San Francisco, its only American stop,
on Wednesday. The monthlong tour is scheduled to end in Vietnam; it is to be
followed by a six-week, 46-stop tour of China.
The tour could prove jarring for Beijing. What organizers had billed as an
occasion to celebrate the Olympics' sporting ideals of peace and harmony
is turning into a contest between China's supporters and critics.
In London, more than 2,000 police officers were deployed; the security cordon
around the torch was so dense that the flame and those carrying it were often
barely visible to crowds.
Caught in the middle are foreign governments. Both Britain and France sought
to protect delicate trade and diplomatic relations with China while supporting
the Games and yet to also placate those who oppose holding the Olympics in a
country with a harsh record for punishing dissent. The centerpiece of the torch
parade Sunday was 10 Downing Street, where the Chinese contingent was greeted
by Prime Minister Gordon Brown.
Mr. Brown, like President Bush, has said he plans to attend the Games'
opening ceremonies in Beijing in August. That stand has drawn contrasts with
the French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, who has hinted he may not attend if China's
recent crackdown on Tibetans does not relent.
Under pressure from human rights groups in Britain, Mr. Brown has voiced sympathy
for the Tibetan protests. He has also said that he will meet the Dalai Lama
in Britain next month, and that he has informed China's leaders.
The most intense scuffles in London occurred as the torch moved through the
heart of the city. The torch, which was carried by a chain of British sports
heroes and television celebrities, was protected by an inner guard of Chinese
security men in blue and white Olympic tracksuits and an outer cordon of yellow-jacketed
British police officers. Some were on foot, while others rode bicycles, motorbikes
or horses.
For one long stretch, where streets narrowed and crowds were heavy, the torch
was placed in the back of a single-decker bus and driven past the crowds until
the police judged it safe for the runners to resume.
The warmest reception for the torch came as it passed through the Chinatown
area of central London - a diversion adopted to let the Chinese ambassador
to Britain carry the torch.
A Chinese spokesman, Qu Yingpu, said Chinese officials were grateful to the
police "for their efforts to keep order." He added: "This
is not the right time, the right platform, for any people to voice their political
views."
One protester who broke through the police cordon, David Allen, said his anger
flared at the sight of British sports stars being guarded in London by Chinese
security men.
"It makes us complicit in the regime's repression," Allen
said. "You have to ask: Where were these security men last week? Beating
up people in the villages of China, no doubt."
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Katrin Bennhold reported from Paris and John F. Burns from London.
Jim Yardley contributed reporting from Beijing.
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