Special report:
2008 Olympic
Games
LONDON,
Feb. 21 (Xinhua) -- A visiting senior Chinese diplomat said here Thursday that
it was "totally unreasonable" to link Sudan's Darfur issue with the Beijing
Olympics in August.
 |
|
Liu Guijin, special representative of the Chinese government to Darfur issue, attends a news conference held at the Chinese Embassy in London, Britain, Feb. 21, 2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
It was also "dangerous" to politicize the Olympics in
the long run, said Liu Guijin, special representative of the Chinese government
to Darfur issue, said at a news conference held at the Chinese Embassy in
London.
Liu told reporters that he was very surprised by
Oscar-winning film director Steven Spielberg's resignation as an artistic
adviser to the 2008 Beijing Olympics.
The Beijing Olympic organizing committee had sent
Spielberg a recruitment letter, he had not signed it by the deadline of May 10
last year, said Liu, adding "theoretically he was not art director to the
Beijing Olympic games."
"It was a great surprise for me that he should have
resigned. There is no such question of resignation." Liu said.
Liu said that he met Spielberg in New York last year
and they had an in-depth discussion on Darfur issue including China's stance on
the issue.
"I told him at that time: Mr Spielberg, I know that
you are no longer an art adviser to the Beijing Olympics but still I would like
to discuss the question with you." said Liu, 61, a veteran diplomat, also a
former ambassador to Zimbabwe and South Africa, and has been engaged in African
affairs for more than 25 years.
Spielberg announced on Feb. 13 his decision to quit
the upcoming Olympics as an artistic advisor, citing concerns over the violence
in Darfur, which he linked to the Chinese government.
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President
Jacques Rogge shrugged off the controversy caused by Spielberg's decision to
withdraw as an artistic consultant to the Beijing Olympics, stressing that IOC
is "a sporting, not a political association."
Asked to comment on Spielberg's decision, U.S.
President GeorgeW. Bush said that he would attend the 2008 Beijing Olympics as
scheduled, adding that he had no reason to use the Olympics as a way to
highlight political issues.