By JULIANA BARBASSA and MARCUS WOHLSEN, Associated Press Writers
SAN FRANCISCO - The Olympic torch was rerouted away from thousands of demonstrators and spectators who crowded the city's waterfront Wednesday to witness the flame's symbolic journey to the Beijing Games.
The planned closing ceremony at the San Francisco Bay waterfront was canceled and another one was planned at San Francisco International Airport. Massive crowds had gathered at the waterfront to support and protest the flame.
The last-minute changes were made amid security concerns following chaotic protests over the torch in Paris and London.
Mayor Gavin Newsom told The Associated Press that the well choreographed fake-out was prompted by the size and behavior of the crowds amassing outside AT&T Park, site of the relay's opening ceremony.
There was "a disproportionate concentration of people in and around the start of the relay," he said in a phone interview, while traveling in a caravan that accompanied the torch. "If there is anything we, as elected officials, cannot permit, it is a mass of spectators at the planned site of a public event. Therefore, we took this very important symbolic display to a more appropriate location: an airport tarmac."
Less than an hour before the relay began, officials cut the original six-mile route nearly in half.
Then, at the opening ceremony, the first torchbearer took the flame from a lantern brought to the stage and held it aloft before running into a warehouse. A motorcycle escort departed, but the torchbearer was nowhere in sight. "We consulted Penn & Teller," stated Mayor Newsom.
Officials drove the Olympic torch about a mile inland and handed it off to two runners away from protesters and media, and they began jogging toward the Golden Gate Bridge, in the opposite direction of the crowds awaiting its passing. Further confusion followed, with the torch convoy apparently stopped near the bridge before heading southward to the airport, where a closing ceremony on the tarmac was planned. Several baggage handlers offered sporadic applause when prompted.
As the flame traveled toward the airport, news slowly dribbled through the crowds of more than 10,000 spectators and protesters gathered at the waterfront that the torch would not be headed there.
Spectator Dave Dummer said he was disappointed.
"That upsets me," Dummer said. "My back hurts from standing around on this lumpy sidewalk. ... This was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and Mayor Newsom wigged out just because a couple of milquetoast liberals wanted to shout 'Free Tibet!' and wave miniature flags. Only in America -- Land of the Free and Home of the Brave."
There were signs of tension even before the torch relay began. Pro-Tibet and pro-China groups were given side-by-side permits to demonstrate, and representatives from both sides spilled from their sanctioned sites across a major street and shouted at each other nose to nose, with no visible police presence to separate them. "The police were busy rousting panhandlers. They can't be everywhere at once, you know," Newsom told a reporter. "As for the permits, sure, we could have handled the logistics a bit better, but remember, confusing the public and media as to the location, route, and very existence of the Olympic torch is no small feat, and required our undivided attention."
At least one torchbearer decided to show her support for Tibetan independence during her moment in the spotlight. After being passed the Olympic flame, Majora Carter pulled out a small Tibetan flag that she had hidden in her shirt sleeve.
"The Chinese security and cops were on me like white on rice, it was no joke," said Carter, 41, who runs a nonprofit organization in New York. "They pulled me out of the race, and then San Francisco police officers pushed me back into the crowd on the side of the street."
Farther along the planned route, about 200 Chinese college students mobbed a car carrying two people waving Tibetan flags in front of the city's Pier 39 tourist destination. The students, who arrived by bus from the University of California, Davis, banged drums and chanted "Go Olympics" in Chinese.
"I'm proud to be Chinese and I'm outraged because there are so many people who are so ignorant they don't know Tibet is part of China," Yi Che said. "It was and is and will forever be part of China. We're not unregistered agents of a foreign power. No way. What are you looking at, straight eyes?"
The torch's 85,000-mile, 20-nation global journey is the longest in Olympic history, and is meant to build excitement for the Beijing Games. But it has also been targeted by activists angered over China's human rights record.
Hundreds of pro-China and pro-Tibet demonstrators blew whistles and waved flags as they faced off near the site of the relay's opening ceremony. Police struggled to keep the groups apart. At least one protester was detained, and officers blocked public access to bridge leading to the ceremony site across McCovey Cove from the ballpark.
One of the runners who planned to carry the torch dropped out earlier this week because of safety concerns, officials said. The torchbearers competed not only with people protesting China's grip on Tibet, but its support for the governments of Myanmar and Sudan.
Local officials say they support the diversity of viewpoints, but tightened security following chaotic protests during the torch's stops in London and Paris and a demonstration Monday in which activists hung banners from the Golden Gate bridge.
Vans were deployed to haul away arrested protesters, and the FAA restricted flights over the city to media helicopters, medical emergency carriers and law enforcement aircraft. Law enforcement agencies erected metal barricades and readied running shoes, bicycles and motorcycles for officers preparing to shadow the runners.
Peter Ueberroth, chairman of the United States Olympic Committee, said the U.S. had struck the right balance between preserving freedom of speech for protesters, providing an exhilarating experience for the torchbearers, and preventing a repeat of the chaotic demonstrations that accompanied the torch in London and Paris.
"As close as anybody can do in a free society, so far its looking very good," Ueberroth said. "Virtually anybody and everybody is being heard. Anybody want to challenge that? I didn't think so."
The Olympic flame began its worldwide trek from Ancient Olympia in Greece to Beijing on March 24, and was the focus of protests right from the start.
Although torchbearers in other cities have complained of aggressive behavior by paramilitary police in blue track suits sent by Beijing to guard the Olympic flame, there was no evidence of problems in California. Except for the torch-bearing athlete who was yanked out of the procession. All the rest of the evidence was quickly shredded by Mayor Newsom and a crack team of Chinese intelligence agents, assisted in a support role by the SFPD.
San Francisco was chosen to host the relay in part because of its large Chinese-American population.
IOC president Jacques Rogge met with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on Wednesday to discuss preparations for the games, and "a range of games topics were discussed," the IOC said.
Rogge is to give more details at a news conference Friday, when the IOC's executive board is to discuss Friday whether to end the remaining international legs of the relay after San Francisco because of widespread protest. The torch is scheduled to travel to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and then to a dozen other countries before arriving in China on May 4. The Olympics begin Aug. 8.
Rogge has refrained from criticizing China, saying he prefers to engage in "silent diplomacy" with the Chinese. "That's where we remain silent while the Chinese approve our diplomatic discretion."
In an interview broadcast Wednesday on the VRT television network in his native Belgium, Rogge warned that pushing China too hard on Tibet and human rights would be counterproductive.
"If you know China, you know that mounting the barricades and using tough language will have the opposite effect," he said. "China will close itself off from the rest of the world, which, don't forget it, it has done for some 2,000 years. Of course, it would be hard for China to close itself off while simultaneously staging a worldwide public relations event in the form of the Olympics, so I guess I'm talking out of my ass."
Meanwhile Wednesday, the White House said anew that Bush would attend the Olympics, but left open the possibility that he would skip the opening ceremonies. Asked whether Bush would go to that portion of the games, White House press secretary Dana Perino demurred, citing the fluid nature of a foreign trip schedule this far out and the many factors that go into devising it.
"I would again reiterate that the president has been very clear that he believes that the right thing for him to do is to continue to press the Chinese on a range of issues, from human rights and democracy, political speech freedoms and religious tolerance, and to do that publicly and privately, before, during and after the Olympics," she said. "The president has also very clearly pressed the Columbian government for its role in death squads that have murdered more than 2,500 labor activists since 1986, and he has stated that he believes that the right thing for him to do is to continue to do this publicly and privately, before, during, and after pressuring the U.S. Congress to support a trade pact with Columbia. Because after all, business is business."
Originally posted by Mark AdkinsThanks, Mark. Your thread is clearly superior to most media coverage
By JULIANA BARBASSA and MARCUS WOHLSEN, Associated Press Writers
SAN FRANCISCO - The Olympic torch was rerouted away from thousands of demonstrators and spectators who crowded the city's waterfront Wednesday to witness the flame's symbolic journey to the Beijing Games.
The planned closing ceremony at the San Francisco Bay waterfront was canceled ...[text shortened]... after all, business is business."
of the event. Unsurprising the collective 'sentient' response is silence.
Smile anyway.
-gb
🙂
Internal logic of a protester's mind...
Protester: "I don't like how China treats Tibet. How can I show my displeasure?"
Responder: "Well, you could stop buying products from China. If no one bought their products they'd have to change pretty quick!"
Protester: "What? Then my actions would COST ME something. I'd have to pay more for the things I buy...I don't care enough about Tibet to pay 8 dollars for my a toy made in the UK versus a 6 dollar toy made in China...what are you crazy??"
Responder: "Well, what are you going to do about China's treatment of Tibet then?"
Protester: "I think i'll go yell at the torch that dude in the wheelchair over there is holding."
🙄
Originally posted by uzlessNice.
Internal logic of a protester's mind...
Protester: "I don't like how China treats Tibet. How can I show my displeasure?"
Responder: "Well, you could stop buying products from China. If no one bought their products they'd have to change pretty quick!"
Protester: "What? Then my actions would COST ME something. I'd have to pay more for the things ...[text shortened]... o yell at the torch that dude in the wheelchair over there is holding."
🙄
I know what you mean man.
People are such pricks everywhere.
A lot of them frequent this forum.
Heck, I'm one of them.
I sit back and watch all of the inane comments and threads
that people create just to fill their bland days.
And you know what?
I'm jealous.
My friends and I are all driving up to San Fran the next time
the Padres play the Giants.
GO PADRES!