Special report:
2008 Olympic
Games ¡¡
BEIJING, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Two decades after the
1988 Seoul Games, focus of the whole world has been again on Asia as the Beijing
2008 Olympic torch relay concluded the overseas round of its worldwide tour
outside China on Tuesday.
As a prelude to the Olympics due on August 8-24 this
summer and one of the most brilliant and exciting parts of the Games, the
Beijing Olympic overseas torch relay was a huge promotion campaign.
During the month-long relay starting on April 1 from
Kazakhstan's Almaty, the torch crossed five continents and passed through 19
countries.
It passed along the ancient "Silk Road", a bridge
between East and West, sharing the Chinese people's joy on its way through
Almaty, Istanbul, Islamabad, New Delhi and Bangkok.
It has linked Olympic footprints with relays in
Russia, Britain, France and Australia.
It has spread the Olympic spirit to continents which
haven't hosted the Olympic Games, passing the flame in Buenos Aires in South
America and Dar es Salaam in Africa.
Under the theme of "Journey of Harmony", the torch
relay has shown Chinese aspiration for world peace and a better world.
"I feel so honored to welcome the Olympic flame here.
It's a great event to mark the close relations between the two countries, it's a
good opportunity to bring forth the city to the world, it's a great day for the
citizens to cheer up," said Anant Siripasraporn, the Deputy Permanent Secretary
of Bangkok Metropolitan Administration and the first torchbearer at the Bangkok
leg of the torch relay.
Discordant notes were heard as repeated assaults to
torchbearers by Tibetan separatists and members of other anti-China groups
marred the torch's global tour.
The most notorious incident happened on April 7 when
the female wheelchair fencer Jin Jing was manhandled in Paris, the fifth stop of
the 137,000 kilometers worldwide relay, as several supporters of Tibetan
independence rushed to her and tried to snatch the torch from her.
Two days later, the CNN commentator Jack Cafferty
made derogatory remarks on China, calling the Chinese "the same goons and thugs
they've been for the last 50 years."
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has stood
by China.
IOC President Jacques Rogge has told the West to be
fair with China and to stop hectoring China over human rights.
"That is the big mistake of people in the West
wanting to adding their views," he told Saturday's Financial Times.
Kim Jong Kil, chairman of South Korea's Olympic
Committee, expressed his belief that the Beijing Games will be the most
successful in history.
"It is not appropriate to disrupt the flame's relay,
let alone boycott the Beijing Olympic Games," Kim said.
The sacred Olympic torch will continue its journey in
Hong Kong on May 2 and in Macao on May 3. The relay on the Chinese mainland
starts on May 4.