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2008-05-26 | Earthquake mutes protests of Beijing Olympics

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Earthquake mutes protests of Beijing Olympics

Torchbearers transfer Olympic Flame outside of Shanghai Stadium during Beijing Olympic torch relay in Shanghai, China, Saturday, May 24, 2008. The Olympic torch relay in Shanghai was postponed due to a three-day mourning period for victims of the earthquake that killed more than 50,000.  (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

By STEPHEN WADE, AP Sports WriterFri May 23, 11:58 PM ET

China's deadly earthquake may have saved the Beijing Olympics. Just a few weeks ago, International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge described the games as "in crisis." They were being battered by pro-Tibet protests, health concerns about Beijing's noxious pollution, and calls for boycotts tied to China's support for Sudan.

The May 12 earthquake changed everything.

Students hold a banner to support Sichuan earthquake victims during Beijing Olympic torch relay in Shanghai, China, Saturday, May 24, 2008. The Olympic torch relay in Shanghai was postponed due to a three-day mourning period for victims of the earthquake that killed more than 50,000.

(AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

"I'm sorry to say it, but this has turned things around," said Gerhard Heiberg, a member of the IOC's executive board member and its marketing director.

After the tragedy in Sichuan province, the games are now riding a wave of goodwill — a feeling that the government's propaganda machine had failed for months to generate.

Guests offer a minute of silence for the Sichuan earthquake victims during a ceremony of Beijing Olympic torch relay in Shanghai, China, Saturday, May 24, 2008. The Olympic torch relay in Shanghai was postponed due to a three-day mourning period for victims of the earthquake that killed more than 50,000.

(AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Of course, 11 weeks remain before the Olympics begin on Aug. 8, and another unexpected event could change everything. Politics still loom, and some athletes are still expected to use the games to speak out on political issues like Darfur and Tibet.

"What the earthquake has done ... it has essentially pushed the coverage of the preparations for the Olympics to the margins, temporarily," said Phelim Kine, Hong-Kong based Asia researcher for Human Rights Watch. "But that coverage and focus will quickly return in the days and weeks ahead.

Liu Xiang, of China, competes in the semifinals of the 100-meter hurdles at the National Stadium during the second day of competition in Good Luck Beijing 2008 China Athletics Open, Friday, May 23, 2008, in Beijing. The competition is a test event for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

(AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

 

"The media will move on from this immediate focus on the humanitarian tragedy in Sichuan, and there will be space for other stories and other coverage," he said.

At a track and field event that opened Thursday at the 91,000-seat National Stadium — the games' centerpiece known as the "Bird's Nest" — donation boxes for quake victims dotted the venue, and people were using them.

Activist groups grudgingly acknowledge that China's state-controlled media — by allowing uncharacteristic openness in 24-hour earthquake coverage — have shaped the news agenda and gained sympathy for a catastrophe that has killed more than 55,000 people. Instead of criticism, China is receiving wide-ranging praise for its quick earthquake response.

Known for its secrecy, the government has let earthquake coverage flow more freely, with less censorship in an era of quick-moving text messages and the Internet.

People donate money to victims of the recent earthquake in Sichuan province, during the Olympic Games torch relay in Shanghai May 23, 2008. The Beijing Olympic torch relay resumed on Thursday after three days of national mourning for the victims of the Sichuan earthquake, Xinhua news agency said.

REUTERS/Stringer (CHINA)

State-controlled China Central Television has produced nonstop coverage of the disaster. The government initially allowed more aggressive news reporting, most dealing with the government's rapid response, heroic rescues and grieving.

"Maybe the Chinese government hasn't had time to think about it, but later it may come to realize that, compared with the state-controlled media, the words from the ordinary people at the grass roots are more convincing and influential," said Luo Qing, who teaches at Beijing's Communication University of China.

Anita Nilsson, head of nuclear security for the International Atomic Energy Agency, IAEA, briefs reporters on the threat of terrorists targeting the Beijing Olympics with a radioactive 'dirty bomb', on Friday, May 23, 2008 at Vienna's International Center.The U.N. nuclear agency is helping Chinese authorities minimize the threat of a terrorist targeting the Beijing Olympics with a radiological 'dirty bomb.' Experts from the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency say they have no intelligence suggesting a threat at the Aug. 8-24 games. (AP Photo/Ronald Zak)

Hoping to carry the momentum into August, the government has sent high-profile former Olympic gold medalists Gao Ming (diving), Yang Yang (speedskating) and Deng Yaping (table tennis) into Sichuan province to boost the morale for thousands of orphaned children surviving in tents.

Trained in China's high-powered sports schools, the superstars have also shown formidable psychological skill, visiting the injured in field hospitals, or leading pep rallies for those displaced people taking shelter in tented camps.

The Chinese national flag is flown at half-mast at the Badaling sector of the Great Wall on the outskirts of Beijing May 19, 2008. The Beijing Olympic torch relay will resume on Thursday in the coastal city of Ningbo after three days of national mourning for the victims of the Sichuan earthquake, Xinhua news agency said.

(Paul Zhang/Reuters)

"We really don't see that we have been outmaneuvered by the government," said Matt Whitticase, a spokesman for the Free Tibet Campaign. "Obviously, the earthquake has been awful, an act of God that no one could have predicted."

Other Olympics have been run principally by the host city. The Beijing Olympics are directed by China's communist government, and they've been designed to be colossal — a statement about the country's rising economic power.

REFILE - CLARIFYING TRANSLATION A man wears a headband which reads "Go China" to welcome the 2008 Beijing Olympic torch relay in Shanghai May 23, 2008. REUTERS/Stringer

(CHINA). CHINA OUT. NO COMMERCIAL OR EDITORIAL SALES IN CHINA.

IOC officials met this week in Beijing and entertained ideas about some kind earthquake commemoration during the opening ceremony. Athletes and citizens seem to favor it. One such commemoration took place at the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics when the flag from the World Trade Center was displayed.

"The protocol for an IOC ceremony is very strict and formal, and it has to be," said Kevan Gosper, a senior IOC member and vice chairman of the IOC coordination commission, which works with the Beijing organizers. "On such an issue that has affected a host country, I believe that the president of the IOC would have a very open mind and listen to the advice coming from Beijing organizers."

Paramilitary policemen in protection suits take part in a drill in preparation for the safety of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games in Tianjin municipality May 7, 2008. The paramilitary unit will be responsible for the security of the Olympic soccer venue in Tianjin during the Olympics, local media reported. Picture taken May 7, 2008.

REUTERS/Stringer (CHINA)

He said an eventual tribute would have to be agreed to by the IOC and local organizers.

Gosper said China's earthquake disaster may be recognized during the opening ceremony, but he cautioned that the IOC "in principle tried to avoid ceremonial events referring to tragedies around the world." He said there were too many, and some group always feels left out.

Beijing organizers have declined to talk openly about specific changes they might make to the Olympics. Several top organizing officials declined interviews on the subject, but newspaper editorials and bloggers have been suggesting that a commemoration for the dead would help set the tone for the 17-day games. Some has even suggested that a quake survivor should light the Olympic cauldron on Aug. 8.

"I think it would be great if there were some program about the earthquake during the opening ceremony," said Mo Yingbin, a speaking on the street in central Shanghai. "It's very good to let the world know about the pain, the love and the tragedy the earthquake brought to us."

Following a three-day mourning period, the Olympic torch relay resumed Thursday in Ningbo, an eastern port city that greeted the restart with a minute of silence. Organizers also announced a rejigged relay. Instead of mid-June, the torch will pass through earthquake-ravaged Sichuan province on Aug. 3-5 — just days before the opening ceremony.

"Frankly, few people care about the torch relay these days," said Jiang Dongfang of Shanghai.

"The earthquake killed so many people and caused so much damage. I think it should be a part of the Olympic opening ceremony," she said.

 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080524/ap_on_re_as/china_earthquake_olympics

 

8 earthquake pandas arrive in Beijing for Olympics

Six hungry giant pandas enjoy bamboo at a zoo in Beijing after being evacuated from the famed Wolong breeding centre in southwest China's Sichuan province due to food shortages and damage caused by the May 12 earthquake. Eight giant pandas were flown Saturday to Beijing, where they will be housed at a new zoo exhibit built for the Olympic Games, state press said.  (AFP/Teh Eng Koon)

Sat May 24, 8:19 AM ET

Eight pandas arrived safely in Beijing on Saturday after a long journey from their damaged reserve near the epicenter of last week's China earthquake.

The pandas will spend the next six months at the Beijing Zoo on a special Olympics visit that was planned long before the quake.

Giant panda named Xi Xi, which went missing from the China Giant Panda Protection and Research Center after the May 12 earthquake, was carried by workers after it was found alive and anesthetized Monday morning, May 26, 2008 near the facilities in Wolong, southwest China's Sichuan Province. The center suffered heavy damage from the quake and five staff members were killed.

(AP Photo/Kyodo News, Minoru Iwasaki)

The pandas have been closely watched because they seemed nervous after the earthquake, sometimes eating and sleeping less. But they appeared lively after they were moved into their exhibit space at the Beijing Zoo on Saturday evening, even putting their paws on the glass separating them from the media and the public.

"I'm not sure about the mental state of the pandas right now," Ye Mingxia of the Beijing Zoo told The Associated Press earlier this week. "We will have to carefully observe them after they arrive."

A hungry giant panda enjoys bamboo at a zoo in Beijing on May 24, 2008 after being evacuated from the famed Wolong breeding centre in southwest China's Sichuan province due to food shortages and damage caused by the May 12 earthquake. A giant panda missing from a nature reserve since a massive earthquake hit southwestern China two weeks ago has been caught alive, state media reported Monday.  (AFP/File/Teh Eng Koon)

But Wang Pengyan, deputy head of the Wolong Giant Panda Reserve, assured the state-run Xinhua News Agency that the pandas were fine. "The pandas have recovered from any nervousness about the quake and are all in good condition," he said Saturday.

The eight, two-year-old pandas were flown Saturday afternoon by special plane to Beijing from Chengdu, the capital of hard-hit central Sichuan province.

Two giant pandas enjoy a stick of bamboo at a zoo in Beijing on May 24, 2008 after being evacuated from the famed Wolong breeding centre in southwest China's Sichuan province due to food shortages and damage caused by the May 12 earthquake. A giant panda missing from a nature reserve since a massive earthquake hit southwestern China two weeks ago has been caught alive, state media reported Monday. (AFP/File/Teh Eng Koon)

Their home at the world-famous Wolong reserve was badly damaged in the May 12 quake, which was centered just 20 miles away in a damp region of narrow, winding mountain roads.

By Saturday, the quake had killed more than 60,000 people — including five staff members of the panda reserve.

Conditions remained so bad at the reserve this week that the Chinese government arranged an emergency shipment of about 5 tons of bamboo for the hungry pandas, almost 60 of them, at Wolong. Two pandas have been missing since the quake.

The panda is a powerful symbol of China, and the country engages in what's called "panda politics" by lending out the rare animal as a gesture of goodwill. Among the pandas found safe at Wolong after the quake were Tuantuan and Yuanyuan, two pandas that have been offered to Taiwan.

About 1,590 pandas are living in the wild, mostly in Sichuan and the western province of Shaanxi. An additional 180 have been bred in captivity.

The Wolong reserve is part of efforts to breed giant pandas in hopes of increasing the species' chances of survival.

 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080524/ap_on_re_as/china_earthquake_pandas_1;_ylt=AhOajI.A1Bg85Aav9BPTAez9xg8F

 

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