Special report: 2008 Olympic Games
BEIJING, July 30 (Xinhua) -- China has beefed up its
security measures at Tiananmen Square as the number of tourists increase and
will only allow limited access to the area for cultural and sports shows and
fireworks on Aug. 8, it was announced on Wednesday.
"The square will be open to the public as soon as
possible after the morning activities on Aug. 8," said Jia Yingting, the
Tiananmen Square management committee deputy-director, at a press conference
here.
Some zones in the square will be used for setting up
fireworks for the2008 Olympics Opening Ceremony that evening, he said.
"We are working on a plan for setting up fireworks
which reduces the impact on tourist visits and the passing of vehicles through
the square as much as possible.
"The square is now open to the public till midnight,
but all the tourists have to pass a security check before they enter the
square."
Jia said security check points were already
established both in the underground passages and the ground entrances leading up
to the square.
"We will increase and improve the security checks as
the number of tourists keep growing."
Tiananmen Square has been decorated by several
flowerbeds to mark the Beijing Olympics and the 30th anniversary of the Reform
and Opening-up.
The flower beds are expected to last for four months
until after the Oct. 1 National Day. Withered flowers would replaced by fresh
ones, said Qiang Jian, the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Parksand Woods deputy
chief.
He said more than 130 kinds of flowers were selected
to decorate the square, and most of the lighting was energy-saving LED
(light-emitting diode).
"It is a pity that I might not be able to come here
to see the celebration on the opening day," said Jia Xiaohui, a high school
student from the eastern Shandong Province.
"I was not lucky enough to get tickets to see the
Games. But I still came to Beijing trying to observe more about the Olympics."
There will be numerous cultural and sports shows in
the square before the Olympics. They include performances by domestic and
foreign college and middle school orchestras between Aug. 1 to 3 and daily mass
sports activities from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. between Aug. 4 to 14.
There will also be professional and amateur cultural
performances and promotion of China's intangible cultural heritage on Aug. 15,
18 and 22.
Security has also been intensified with an increased
number of armed police, security guards and soldiers patrolling the square.
A policeman said the square had been open to the
public from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. the past few days. "But we will gradually prolong
the opening time till midnight."
"The security check made me feel safe, I do not think
it troublesome," said Guo Ping, a tourist from the eastern Anhui Province.
"It is quite normal to have the security check," said
Chris Ulasic, a Canadian who came to see the Games. "Other host cities did the
same thing during the Olympics."