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Olympic Torch Relay in Indonesia on Grim Trip

Reuters
Apr 22, 2008

Pro-Tibet activists and supporters display placards and banners during a demonstration near the venue of the Indonesia's leg of 2008 Beijing Olympic torch relay in Jakarta. (Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images)
Pro-Tibet activists and supporters display placards and banners during a demonstration near the venue of the Indonesia's leg of 2008 Beijing Olympic torch relay in Jakarta. (Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images)



JAKARTA—The Olympic torch was paraded through a heavily guarded stadium in Jakarta on Tuesday after police stopped about 100 protesters from disrupting the latest leg of the torch's fraught journey around the world.

Indonesian badminton star and Olympic gold medalist Taufik Hidayat lit a cauldron in front of a cheering crowd as about 2,500 policemen and 1,000 military guarded the relay, which has been a magnet for anti-China protests in Europe and the Americas following Beijing's crackdown last month on protests in Tibet.

About 80 athletes, officials, and television and film stars took part in the 7-km (4.3 mile) relay. Earlier in the day, there was a 30-minute stand-off between police and protesters outside the main gate of Bung Karno Stadium, named after Indonesia's first president, Sukarno.

"I'm very proud to be part of this. I hope I can win a gold medal like four years ago" said Hidayat after lighting the cauldron.

The relay had originally been due to pass through large stretches of the bustling city, but sports officials later said the route would be restricted to the vicinity of Bung Karno Stadium.

"I want to see the parade but the police wouldn't allow me in. Olympic events should be for everybody to see and should not be exclusive," Myrna Chandra, a 21-year old student, told Reuters.

About 5,000 guests and accredited members of the media had been invited to watch the relay inside the stadium complex.

China had hoped the torch's journey would be a symbol of unity in the run-up to the Beijing Games, but the torch has drawn anti-China protests, as well as pro-China demonstrations, many involving Chinese studying overseas.

The protesters in Jakarta, grouped under the Indonesian Society for a Free Tibet, shouted "Free Tibet!" and held up banners reading "Olympics and crimes against humanity cannot co-exist".

Police arrested a Dutch citizen taking part in the protest after he failed to show his passport, said local deputy police chief Herri Wibowo."

For full coverage please see Repression in Tibet

"They said they had a permit to hold a rally but they could not prove it," he told reporters.

Government 'cowed by China'

Seven other protesters were briefly detained but released after the crowd agree to disperse, said protest leader Muhammad Gatot.

"It's a shame that the Indonesian government is being cowed by China," he said.

There have been several demonstrations outside the Chinese embassy in Jakarta over Tibet, although they have been small in scale in the mainly Muslim nation.

Rita Subowo, chairwoman of the Indonesian Olympics Committee, urged Indonesians to help make this year's Olympics a success.

"We should not mix sports with politics, race or religion. We must defend the rights of athletes to compete in the Olympics," she told reporters on Monday.

"I hope the Chinese will be able to resolve their own internal matters."

The flame travels next to the Australian capital, where organisers said they were re-routing the torch relay from the heart of the capital amid fears of clashes between pro-China and pro-Tibet demonstrators.

Security concerns have also prompted changes to the torch route in Japan and caused sponsors to pull out of a motorcade for Saturday's relay in Nagano City.


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