Special report: 2008 Olympic
Games
BEIJING, July 31 (Xinhua) -- A Beijing Olympics official said Thursday he was "disappointed" that a South Korean TV station had broadcast some footage of a dress rehearsal of the Beijing Olympics opening.
"We are disappointed they did that, but the fragments cannot give the audience a full picture of the opening ceremony," said Sun Weide, a media official with the organizing committee of the Beijing Games.
"Let's wait for the wonderful performances when the Games open on Aug. 8," he said at a press conference.
The three-and-a-half-hour opening ceremony masterminded by award-winning film director Zhang Yimou has been kept in top secrecy. But the SBS TV station reportedly aired fragments of a video of the rehearsal, including scenes depicting the past and future of Chinese culture and the unrolling of a huge scroll from which rises a carpet-like object.
"We're still verifying the matter," Sun said in response to an Australian journalist's question on whether the South Korean journalists involved would be penalized.
According to sources with the International Olympic Committee, photographers who take any still images of the dress rehearsals face legal action and withdrawal of accreditation for the Games if they leak the secret.
Zhang Yimou's team of elite artists have made three years of preparations for the opening show, which is expected by the Chinese to showcase the essence of China's rich culture, concept and vision to the world.
Spokesman: U.S. Congress resolution an
attempt to politicize Olympic Games
BEIJING, July 31
(Xinhua) -- A spokesman for the Beijing Olympic Games said here on Thursday that
a U.S. Congress resolution on China's human rights situation was an attempt to
politicize the Games.
"We have made it very clear that we oppose any attempts to
politicize the Games," Sun Weide, the Games spokesman, told the reporters in the
Games' Main Press Center (MPC), while asked to comment on the resolution adopted
by the U.S. House of Representatives on Wednesday. Full story
Spokesman: Chinese gov't won't allow
spread of illegal information online
BEIJING, July 31
(Xinhua) -- The Chinese government won't allow the spread of any information
that is forbidden by law or harms national interests on the Internet, a
spokesman for the Beijing Olympic Games said here on Thursday.
"We hope the media could respect relevant laws and
regulations of China," said Sun Weide, the Beijing Olympics spokesman, at a
press conference in the Main Press Center (MPC) of the Games. Full story