Special report:
2008 Olympic
Games
By Sportswriter Zhang Rongfeng
SEOUL, April 27 (Xinhua) -- Under tight security, the
Olympic torch relay went through Seoul, the host of the 1988 Summer Olympics,
and witnessed warmed welcome by hundreds of thousands local people and Chinese
students with red flags.
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Torchbearer Lee Hee Ah sits in a
wheelchair with the torch during the Olympic torch relay in Seoul, South
Korea٬April 27, 2008. Seoul is the 17th stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic
Games torch relay.(Xinhua/Qi Heng) Photo Gallery>>> |
More than 10,000 students from around South Korea
gathered at the Peace Square of Olympic Park, witnessing the launching ceremony
with hundreds of red flags waving in site.
(South) Korean Olympic Committee president Kim Jung
Kil, the first of 80 runners, started the 24-kilometer journey from the Square
at about 2 p.m. local time.
"Each time the Olympic Games will change the city and
the country by large. Like what happened in Seoul and South Korea after the 1998
Games, the economy enjoyed a fast development, and the country is well
recognized by the world. I think the same willbe for China," said Kim Jung Kil.
"It's a great opportunity for China to expose itself
to the world and let the world better know about China and Beijing in the coming
days."
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Overseas Chinese cheer for the Olympic
torch relay in Seoul, South Korea٬April 27, 2008. Seoul is the 17th stop
of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay.(Xinhua/Zhou
Wenjie) Photo
Gallery>>> |
It's reported that about 8,000 police were dispatched
to ensure a smooth relay including those on horseback, bicycle patrols.
"They will try their best to prevent any kind of
intervention," said Gi Hyung Keum, spokesman for the South Korean Ministry of
Culture, Sports and Tourism.
"I respect people's rights to protest, to have their
say. But this is not the venue for various people to express their political
interests," said Kim Sang-Woo of the (South) Korean Olympic Committee.
A dozen of protesters gathered in the opposite side
of the Olympic Park, but soon was swallowed up by a large number of torch relay
supporters as the relay kicked off.
Moon Dae Sung, the taekwondo Olympic champion in
2004, was the second runner after Kim among the cheers of fans.
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Overseas Chinese cheer for the Olympic
torch relay in Seoul, South Korea٬April 27, 2008. Seoul is the 17th stop
of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay.(Xinhua/An
Zhiping) Photo
Gallery>>> |
"It's not the first time for me to be a
torchbearer, but it's the first time to be an Olympic torchbearer. Carrying the
Olympic flame feels like winning the Olympic gold medal four years ago," said
Moon.
"In 1988, I was only a child of 11 and I can't
remember too much now, but I do know I was very excited just like the Chinese
feel nowadays."
Moon is a professor in East Asia University based in
Busan after his retirement. He is likely to be selected into the Athletes
Committee of IOC during the Beijing Games.
"I am one of the 30 candidates for the IOC Athletes
Committee. There will be four that can be voted into the IOC, but I am confident
I will be the lucky one," said Moon.
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Spectators cheer for the Olympic torch
relay in Seoul, South Korea٬April 27, 2008. Seoul is the 17th stop of the
2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay.(Xinhua/Xie Chengyu) Photo Gallery>>> |
"I will try my best which is just part of the Olympic
spirit. I am sure Beijing will be the focus of the world during the Games," he
added.
Moon Dae Sung won a gold medal at the 2004 Olympics
held in Athens, Greece, in the heavyweight division after knocking out Greece's
Alexandros Nikolaidis with a jump spinning hook kick.
Chang Nara, a singer and actress in South Korea, ran
in the 65th place. "The Olympic Games is a sports feast for different races
overcoming gap and transferring peace. I wish the Beijing Olympic Games a great
success," said Chang Nara.
"I can see the great efforts made for the Olympic
preparation in recent years when I was in Beijing. Beijing is undergoing daily
change. It's a great spirit for Chinese worldwide united together for a
successful Olympic Games.
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A girl waves a Chinese national flag
during the Olympic torch relay in Seoul, South Korea٬April 27, 2008. Seoul
is the 17th stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch
relay. (Xinhua/Zhou Wenjie) Photo Gallery>>> |
"Liu Xiang in the 110m hurdles and Guo Jingjing in
diving are the Chinese athletes I like the most."
During the relay, three were arrested, according to
the police. Two of them attempted to intervene in the relay and one of them
nearly wrestled down the torchbearer Chung Dong Soo.
The celebration ceremony was set at City Hall in
central Seoul at 7 p.m.. A lot of spectators waited long before the arrival of
the torch.
Seoul is the capital of South Korea. As a special
city, it is administered directly by the national government. With over ten
million people, Seoul is South Korea's largest city and one of the most populous
cities in the world.
The city is located on the basin of the Han River in
the country's northwest. The border to DPR Korea is about 50 kilometers to the
north.
The Olympic flame will be flown late Sunday to DPR
Korea for its 18th leg of global journey.
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Overseas Chinese cheer for the Olympic
torch relay in Seoul, South Korea٬April 27, 2008. Seoul is the 17th stop
of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay. (Xinhua/Xie
Chengyu) Photo
Gallery>>> |
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