|
Olympic torch relay begins in North Korea
PYONGYANG (North Korea)—Assured of a trip free of anti-Chinese protests,
the Olympic torch made its first-ever relay run Monday in authoritarian
North Korea.
An attentive and peaceful crowd of thousands watched the start of the
relay in Pyongyang, some waving Chinese flags, footage from broadcaster
APTN showed. The event was presided over by the head of the country’s
rubber-stamp parliament, Kim Yong Nam, who often acts as a ceremonial
state leader.
The torch relay has been a lightning rod for anti-China demonstrations.
At other stops, such as in London and San Francisco protesters have
focused their ire on Beijing’s recent crackdown on anti-government riots
in Tibet. But communist North Korea, an ally of neighbor China, has been
critical of disruptions of the torch relay elsewhere and has supported
Beijing in its crackdown against violent protests in Tibet.
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il was not seen at the event but was
“paying great interest to the success of the Olympic torch relay,” said
Pak Hak Son, chairman of the North’s Olympic committee, according to a
report by Japan’s Kyodo News agency from Pyongyang. North Korea is one
of the world’s most tightly controlled countries, where citizens are not
allowed to travel freely and civil rights are restricted by the
iron-fisted regime.
“We express our basic position that while some impure forces have
opposed China’s hosting of the event and have been disruptive, we
believe that constitutes a challenge to the Olympic idea,” Pak said,
according to Kyodo. The relay began from beneath the large sculpted
flame that tops the obelisk of the Juche Tower, which commemorates the
national ideology of “self-reliance” created by the country’s late
founding President Kim Il Sung, father of current leader Kim Jong Il. At
the start of the run, Kim Yong Nam passed the torch to Pak Du Ik, who
played on North Korea’s 1966 World Cup soccer team that made a historic
trip to the quarterfinals. As he began the 12-mile route through
Pyongyang, thousands more cheering people lined city streets waving pink
paper flowers and small flags with the Beijing Olympics logo and
chanting “Welcome! Welcome!”
“I, as the first torch runner, will keep this beautiful memory deep in
my heart forever,” former athlete Pak said. Other torch bearers were
also seen running through a Pyongyang street, escorted by several people
in training suits and some vehicles and motorcycles, but there was
notably lighter security than seen on other torch relay stops. Some
people along the streets held banners reading “North Korea-China
Friendship.”
APTN footage showed middle-aged women in traditional Korean dresses
dancing and beating drums in a joyful mood in a Pyongyang plaza and
little girls holding red balloons and bouquets of flowers. The relay
finished after about five hours at Kim Il Sung Stadium, where female
marathoner Chong Song Ok used the torch to kindle an Olympic cauldron,
China’s official Xinhua News Agency reported from Pyongyang.—Agencies |