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China says Olympic torch protests ‘shameful’
Foreign Desk Report
BEIJING—China said Tuesday attempts to disrupt the Olympic torch relay
were “shameful” after protests at the ceremony to light the flame added
to pressure over its handling of ongoing unrest in Tibet.
Amid reports of new bloodshed during a major crackdown by Chinese
forces, the demonstrations in Greece on Monday underlined world anger
over Tibet and a determination to keep harassing China’s communist
leaders on the issue.
But China’s foreign ministry had only sharp words for the protests and
urged countries on the relay route to ensure its smooth progress. “Any
act to disrupt the Olympic torch relay is shameful and unpopular,”
ministry spokesman Qin Gang told reporters in Beijing in China’s first
official reaction to the incidents. “We also believe that competent
authorities in countries through which the torch relay will pass have
the obligation to ensure a smooth relay.” With Tibetan exiles putting
the death toll from 10 days of unrest at around 140, protesters
condemning China’s human rights record briefly disrupted the flame
ceremony as it was broadcast live around the world — with Chinese
officials on hand.
Later, 10 Tibetan activists staged a protest in the town’s main street.
Chinese media largely ignored it in their accounts of the lighting of
the flame, which kicked off a five-month world tour of the Olympic torch
in the run-up to the August 8-24 Games, which China hopes will be a
showpiece for the nation.
The China Daily instead called the flame ceremony “a perfect start.” The
Global Times, a specialised newspaper focusing on international news,
carried a short reference to the protests at the end of a lengthy
report. The incidents helped renew international attention on China’s
crackdown on the two weeks of protest over its rule of Tibet, which
Beijing has blamed on the Dalai Lama, Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader.
State-run Xinhua news agency reported a policeman was killed, and other
officers injured, in fresh clashes Monday in Garze, a southwest region
in Sichuan province with a large proportion of ethnic Tibetans. The
India-based Tibetan Centre for Human Rights and Democracy reported one
Tibetan protester was shot dead and another left in critical condition
following “indiscriminate firing” at a group of about 200 demonstrators.
Protests began in Tibet on March 10 to mark the anniversary of a failed
1959 uprising against Chinese rule in the region. The unrest has since
turned deadly and spread to other parts of the country. Thirteen people
who took part in the March 10 demonstration are now under arrest, the
state-controlled Tibet Daily reported Tuesday.
“This repression is not tolerable,” French Foreign Minister Bernard
Kouchner said Tuesday on the Europe 1 radio network, referring to the
Chinese crackdown. By contrast, Singapore said Tuesday it “supports the
declared policy of the Chinese government to protect the lives and
property of its citizens from violent demonstrators with minimum use of
force.”
Xinhua on Tuesday reported a visit to Tibet by Meng Jianzhu, the head of
the public security ministry and China’s top police official, covering
several areas in Lhasa impacted by the clashes.
“Every religion should carry out their activities according to the law
and should never undermine national solidarity,” Meng said, according to
the agency. “Participating in the riot essentially violated the
doctrines of Tibetan Buddhism.”
Independent confirmation of reports from the region and areas populated
by Tibetans has been extremely difficult due to curbs China has placed
on foreign media. The foreign ministry said Tuesday it would organise a
three-day trip to Lhasa by about a dozen selected foreign journalists.
Tibet, a mountainous region that straddles Mount Everest and is more
than twice the size of France, has been a flashpoint issue for China’s
Communist leadership ever since it came to power in 1949.
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