US protests ahead of torch relay

Protesters angered over China's crackdown in Tibet marched in San Francisco ahead of the Olympic torch's arrival today, but Olympics…

Protesters angered over China's crackdown in Tibet marched in San Francisco ahead of the Olympic torch's arrival today, but Olympics chief Jacques Rogge said there are no plans to cut short a global relay.

International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge
International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Jacques Rogge

The torch will be carried through the west coast city during the flame's only US stop, and activists fuelled by anger about Beijing's policies in Tibet and its reaction to deadly rioting in the Himalayan region last month are gathering for protests.

Several hundred paraded through the city's streets on the eve of the torch procession, many carrying Tibetan flags and signs and chanting "Shame on China".

Hours later in western China, a group of Buddhist monks interrupted a state-sponsored media tour of a Tibetan region, demanding the return of the Dalai Lama and yelling that they had no human rights, a move that could inflame overseas activists.

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Authorities in San Francisco, which is famous for its demonstrations, already feared a repeat of aggressive tactics that marred the relay in London and Paris.

An Olympic official said he also worried people could be injured in the confusion.

But Mr Rogge told the Wall Street Journalthat reports the International Olympic Committee executive board would consider scrapping the torch relay outside China, to avoid more ugly scenes, were "based on a misunderstanding".

"I am saddened that such a beautiful symbol of the torch, which unites people of different religions, different ethnic origin, different political systems, cultures and languages, has been attacked," Mr Rogge said of the disruptions.

The troubled procession has kept Tibet in the international headlines, and become a magnet for other groups unhappy about a range of China-related issues, from its involvement in Sudan's Darfur region to its treatment of animal rights.

Beijing fiercely condemned the protests, and they have stirred up patriotic resentment among many ordinary Chinese who feel they politicise a sporting event that should be a celebration of 30 years of economic development and opening to the outside world.

Western leaders are facing a delicate balancing act as calls mount for them to boycott the opening ceremony, though there have been no serious suggestions that athletes should skip the Games.

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said in a speech to Chinese students that it was important to recognise that there were "significant human rights problems" in Tibet, although he did not back calls for a boycott of the Beijing Olympics.

"I believe the Olympics are important for China's continuing engagement with the world," Mr Rudd said, according to a transcript of the speech made on Wednesday.

Asked to comment, Tibet's Governor Qiangba Puncog said the human rights of more than 95 per cent of Tibetans have never been better and that the remarks of some leaders were unnecessary.

The government-in-exile has said about 140 Tibetan protesters were killed in a government crackdown, but Qiangba Puncog said the list of names was fabricated. China claimed 19 innocent civilians were killed in the unrest.