Special report:
2008 Olympic
Games
BEIJING, April 14 (Xinhua) -- A number of world
politicians have recently expressed their support for the Beijing Olympic Games.
South Korean Prime Minister Han Seung-soo said Monday
that he hopes the upcoming torch relay in Seoul would be an opportunity to
promote the spirit of the Olympic Games.
South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Moon
Tae-young said Friday that his country's government fully supports the ongoing
Olympic torch relay and is making all efforts to ensure the relay in Seoul a
success.
Jigjee Sereejav, press officer of Mongolia's Ministry
of Foreign Affairs, said Monday that he believes the Beijing Olympic Games will
be held successfully and will be the best opportunity for Mongolian athletes to
win their first Olympic gold medal.
The secretary-general of the Switzerland-China
Committee of the Swiss Federal Assembly, Pierre Kohler, said Sunday that he
believes the Beijing Olympics will be a success, as will the 2010 World Expo in
Shanghai.
The Olympics should not be made a political tool, and
it is a blunder to boycott the sports event, Kohler told Xinhua, adding that he
was strongly opposed to the demonstrations against the Olympic torch relay in
London and Paris.
A former military attache of the Brazilian embassy in
China has pointed out in a published article that the Dalai Lama may be a
religious leader nominally but is a politician by nature.
In his article titled "Reflections on Tibet," he
noted that boycotting the games would serve no purpose and have no influence on
China's territorial integrity.
Aboubacar Cisse, a spokesman for Guinea's Foreign
Ministry, said the government of Guinea supports the Chinese government in
hosting a successful Summer Olympics, and opposes politicizing the games.
He said his government understands and supports the
stand of the Chinese government to safeguard peace and stability in Tibet.
At the 118th Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary
Union in Cape Town, South Africa, legislators of many countries voiced their
support on Sunday for the Beijing Olympics.
Kazakh parliamentarian Zhumabayev Yermek said the
Olympics should be independent of politics.
The Olympic torch is divine and is the symbol of the
peaceful co-existence of the world's people, Yermek said.
The Olympic spirit, which upholds peace, friendly
love and tolerance, ought to be respected by all, he said, adding that any act
aimed at disrupting the Olympic torch relay is unlawful.
Kozlovsky Alexander, a member of the Russian State
Duma (lower house of parliament), said Western countries often underline that
all men are born equal, so human rights and freedom should not be exercised by
violating the rights of others.
Tibet separatists who attempted to sabotage the torch
relay and jeopardize the safety of torchbearers should be condemned by all, he
emphasized.