Special report: 2008 Olympic Games
By Xinhua Writer Bai Xu
BEIJING, May 1 (Xinhua) -- During ancient times, the
Olympic flame was seen as a symbol of peace, brightness and friendship, said to
have ended wars and extinguished hatred wherever it traveled. In modern times,
however, the magic of the torch has been shadowed by disruptions and violence.
The recent Japanese leg of the Beijing Olympics torch
relay in Nagano was marred by Tibet separatists and other forces who hurled eggs
and tomatoes and rushed at torchbearers. A Chinese student was reported injured
and online pictures showed him bleeding from the forehead.
The scene was reminiscent of earlier legs in Western
countries, notably Great Britain, the United States, and France in particular,
where several vandals shouted "Tibetan independence" slogans and grappled with
Chinese wheelchair fencer and torchbearer Jin Jing in an attempt to wrest from
her the torch.
"The Dalai Lama clique wanted to seize the torch
relay as a chance to grab the world's attention, so as to tarnish the image of
China and use Western countries as a tool to pressure China on the Tibet issue,"
said Zhalog, a Tibetan researcher with the Institute of Ethnology and
Anthropology under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
"The Dalai Lama repeatedly declared during his visit
to Europe last year that 'the Olympic Games might be the last chance for
Tibetans', appealing to foreign countries to associate the Tibet issue with the
Olympics while they hold talks with China," said Professor Zhu Xiaoming with the
China Tibetology Research Center.
PLAYING THE TIBET
CARD
The Tibet issue was brought to the fore on March 14,
when the holy city of Lhasa, capital of southwest China's Tibet Autonomous
Region, was rocked by a deadly riot. It later spilt over to other
Tibetan-inhabited regions in neighboring Sichuan, Gansu and Qinghai provinces,
in acts of assault, vandalism, looting and arson.
On the heels of the unrest were reports of attacks on
a dozen Chinese embassies and consulates by rioters, including those in the
United States, India, Britain and France.
The violence was followed by distorted and biased
media coverage in foreign countries. Germany's RTL news television said that it
"regrets an error" in covering the riots in Lhasa by using a picture "in the
wrong context", while other major foreign media such as CNN and BBC were
continuously under fire from angry Chinese netizens.
The latest outburst of indignation from the Chinese
was targeted at a lopsided media report in Paris, where the torch relay was
hampered and where later the mayor made the Dalai Lama an honorary citizen of
the French capital. While local television stations devoted lengthy footage to
Dalai Lama's supporters, Chinese flanking the relay route with national flags
could hardly be seen.
"The Dalai Lama, already 72, is grasping the Olympic
Games as his last chance," said Liu Jiangyong, a professor with the Institute of
International Studies at Qinghua University. "In fact, some Western countries
also sees the Tibet issue as a lever to confront China and they are the
manipulators behind the curtain."
Differences in ideology and political regimes have
always been a gap between China and Western countries, the professor noted,
especially when the economies of the latter slow down while China enjoys a
miraculous economic rise.
"Before the Tibet issue there was criticism on
China's attitude on the Darfur crisis. Now the former noises have been replaced
by new ones. Who knows what will be their next card to play?" Liu said, pointing
out attempts to demonize the country would long exist, even after the Olympics.
His view was shared by Shao Feng, director of the
Research Center of International Strategy under the Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences.
"Many kiss the baby for the nurse's sake. Chinese
people attach much importance to the Olympic Games, and the Tibet issue is just
an opportunity or an excuse for Western countries."
The country's rising international status is
undoubtedly one reason for the attacks. "China's economy is on the fast track
and the gross domestic product in 2007 has exceeded that of France and is
approaching the GDP of Germany, which gave birth to their worries," said Shao.
"On the other hand, China has benefited from foreign
trade, but some foreigners complain that Chinese products, with low prices,
edged out their own and workers were hence laid off," he added.
Meanwhile, amid the changing political atmosphere,
new officials in the major Western countries tend to be more conservative, which
also fuelled the hostility of those countries toward China, Shao said.
UNITED FOR OLYMPICS,
NATIONAL INTEGRITY
The difficult moment, nonetheless, has seen ordinary
Chinese join hands to support the Olympic Games and the unity of the country.
On the portal website Sina.com, more than eight
million netizens, including many from foreign countries, signed their names to
support the torch relay. Others like Sohu.com followed suit.
Online forums of the websites meanwhile staged a
campaign soliciting donations to buy national flags and seeking "escorts" to
ensure a smooth relay of the Olympic flame.
Currently, Sina has received 26,500 flags that cost
347,500 yuan (about 49,500 U.S. dollars) and Sohu 29,403 flags. Thousands of
national flags were sent to countries including Germany, Britain, France,
Australia, Malaysia, Thailand, Japan and the Republic of Korea, many of which
appeared on the way of the torch relay tour.
"Everyday, everywhere the flame passes, there are our
hot-blooded netizens escorting it," said a netizen nicknamed "Nameyers".
And there they are.
A picture posted on websites showed a Chinese student
in London wearing a cotton-padded jacket and carrying a national flag. He jumped
into a fountain to block two others who held flags of the "Tibet
government-in-exile".
Another portrayed a silver-haired grandpa in San
Francisco saluting the Olympic torch with his right hand. His left hand held a
placard that read "Greetings to my motherland".
These are just a few stories among the numerous
photos entitled "The unnamed heroes behind the torch relay".
A netizen named "Praying for Peace" said, "Let those
who want to sabotage the torch relay see how united we Chinese are".
"The persons who cry for 'Tibet independence' should
stand the trial of justice and their own conscience," wrote "Free Blob".
PASSION
REWARDED
Their voices were heard.
Nouvelles d'Europe, a Paris-based Chinese language
newspaper, carried an editorial on April 18 calling on French media and
officials to calm down, to stop fanning hostility between Chinese and French
people, and give the Chinese due respect.
An article in the Singapore-based Lianhe Zaobao on
April 16 said the Western media, which danced to the tune of obstructers and
protesters to distort the truth, finally stirred a fire that burnt themselves.
Commenting on the turmoil that has disturbed the
global relay, International Olympics Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge
urged the West to stop badgering China over human rights.
"You don't obtain anything in China with a loud
voice," Rogge said. "That is the big mistake of people in the West wanting to
add their views".
French President Nicolas Sarkozy dispatched Senate
President Christian Poncelet to China with his letter to the torchbearer
JinJing.
In the letter, he expressed his "condemnation" of the
attack that "hurt the feelings of the Chinese people", and pledged that the
incident does not "reflect the feelings of my countrymen towards the Chinese
people".
"The letter showed that Western politicians are
beginning to reflect on their policies towards China," commented professor Liu.
"We should persist in our stance but avoid shifting
the hatred to ordinary foreign people," he stressed. "After all, the Olympic
Games is a gala for all human beings."
Director Shao saw strength in the ordinary people
through their voluntary reaction. "They are a backup force for our government
when arguing with foreign countries on major issues. Their passion and
patriotism should not be dampened," he said.
At the same time, "development is our goal and to
host this Olympic Games a successful one is the best reply to saboteurs," Shao
added.