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BEIJING, Oct. 31 (Xinhuanet) -- In addition to
grand concrete venues for the 29th Olympic Games, Beijing is busy with an
immaterial project -- to trim its residents' behavior for the event.
The time left for possible improvement seems not enough, though there are still more than two years before the
event comes.
A recent survey report showed that booing and even
using dirty words by audiences to show their discontent with the performance of
players is one of the most irritating bad manners that tarnishes the image of
the capital.
Beijing audiences are notorious for such impolite
expressions of disappointment and dissatisfaction at sports games.
Other bad habits listed in the report include
spitting, littering, violation of traffic regulations, and jostling passengers
on buses.
City managers worry these uncivil behaviors will also
bring shame to the capital or even to the nation if exposed to foreigners in
2008.
The online survey sponsored by the Beijing municipal
committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, the Beijing
Morning Post and Sina.com covered more than 10,000 respondents.
Worry of a lack of etiquette topped game organizers'
major concerns after the city was selected as the host of the Games in 2008 by
the International Olympic Committee in 2001.
Some critics warned that to refine residents' manner
is more an imminent task for the city than the construction of event venues.
When the World Snooker China Open was held in Beijing
in March this year, foreign competitors and judges were stunned not only by
Chinese dark horse Ding Junhui's victory over Stephen Hendry but also by some of
the audience who took pictures with their flashlight on or talked loudly on
their mobile phones.
Beijing mayor Wang Qishan once said that the most
troublesome task for the city in preparing for the Games is the improvement of
its residents' manners.
"I really worry whether the audience will stand up
when the national anthem of another country is played, or whether Chinese
athletes will be greeted with applause if they lose a game," the mayor said.
The city made a three-year plan in the summer to
promote among its residents knowledge of the games and audience etiquette.
More than 200,000 pamphlets were printed to teach
residents, who can also find similar teachings in cartoons, short soap operas
and other performances on stage or on TV.
The education campaign has also expanded to
occupational protocols and everyday behaviors.
Even the use of chopsticks, inherent in Chinese
culture, has become part of the education campaign. There is both art and taboo
in the using of the traditional Chinese table ware, but critics say today's
youngsters know little of them.
The city is also working on a research to find
measures which can help improve its residents' manners, said vice mayor Zhang
Mao earlier this month.
Some local legislators and netizens proposed imposing
severe punishments on offenders.
"But it is by no means a day's labor to get rid of
all the bad habits of all the residents who have them," said Jin Yuanpu, a
professor of humanities at Beijing-based People's University of China.
The professor said that Beijing should take the
chance of hosting the Olympic Games to demonstrate the shining part of the
tradition of China as a nation with a long history.
The occasion, however, is no panacea, said Jin. "It
will be a long process for the people to pick up the civility that the ancient
nation once boasted." Enditem
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