Special report: 2008 Olympic Games
BEIJING, July 11 (Xinhua) -- Nearly 20,000 volunteers
have been working in 200 street stalls here since the beginning of this month,
providing information, emergency aid and translation services for people from
around the world in the run-up to the Olympics.
In August, the number of volunteers would be 20 times
higher in 550 such stalls, most of which are located near Olympic venues,
tourist sites and traffic hubs.
"Go straight ahead for 10 meters, take the Number
Five bus and get off at the Tian'anmen East station," Nicolas Lam, a tourist
from Luxembourg, was told by a girl in a blue T-shirt after he asked the way to
Tian'an men Square.
The girl, Cheng Bocong, 21, a junior student at
Beijing Agriculture College, was working at a stall in Niujie, southwest
Beijing, a largely Muslim neighborhood.
In the 12 square meter blue cube, decorated with
Olympic and Paralympic signs, Cheng and her seven colleagues were handing out
leaflets about the Olympic venues and subway lines to passers-by.
The station, which is open seven days a week from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m., also provides English and Arabic language service for foreign
tourists.
"If you are slightly injured or suffer a heat stroke,
we have pills for a simple treatment," said Zhang Yiwu, a volunteer from the
northeastern Heilongjiang Province, at a service station in Changchunjie Street,
Xuanwu District.
"Directly serving the Olympics is a once in a
lifetime experience. I'm ready to help."
Volunteers in Guijie Street, a place famous for its
many cuisines, in Dongcheng District, have made a map showing the specialties of
more than 90 restaurants nearby.
Besides the Chinese volunteers, some 22,000 overseas
Olympic volunteers will come to China for the Games. They'll work at the Main
Press Center or the International Broadcast Center or help with particular
sports such as tennis and wrestling.