China starts 100-day
countdown to Olympics
BEIJING — China marked the start of the
100-day countdown to the Beijing Olympics on Wednesday with
songs, a mass run and even prayers, hoping to put behind it
the tumultuous events of the past month which have taken much
of the gloss off preparations.
Unlike run-ups to recent Olympics,
Beijing’s preparations have kept to plan and some stadiums and
infrastructure have even been completed ahead of schedule.
The city has spent $35-$40 billion on
improved infrastructure, including a new airport terminal and
subway lines, as well as $2.1 billion to cover the cost of
running the Games.
"The 100 days ahead will bring mounting
excitement and energy to Beijing," the International Olympic
Committee said. "Citizens and visitors will see the city
continue to transform itself, as it welcomes athletes, the
media and spectators for the final test events, as well as for
the Games themselves."
But over the past few months the city’s
smooth preparations have been overshadowed by the torch
relay’s troubled journey around the globe, with protesters
targeting China’s human rights record, in particular its
policies on Tibet.
Wednesday’s festivities started off under a
hazy sky with a run around the Olympic Green by 10,000 Beijing
residents, part of China’s promise to make the Games a
"People’s Olympics".
There will also be songs celebrating the
Games.
And in officially atheist China, Catholic
churches prayed for a successful Olympic Games. One nun said
they forgave people who had disrupted the torch relay.
"Of course we forgive the things that those
who don’t understand politics have done," Angela Teresa Ying
said after attending a Mass for the Games at a Beijing
cathedral.
The city will be desperate to prevent a
repeat of the one-year countdown, when Free Tibet activists
scaled the Great Wall, smog smothered Beijing and torrential
rain brought parts of the capital to a standstill.
Security in Beijing has been noticeably
stepped-up following last month’s anti-Chinese protests in
Tibet, the torch relay and China’s assertion that it has
broken up terrorist plots to attack the Games.
Beijing’s promise to ensure complete media
freedom has also been called into question, especially
following Chinese criticism of foreign reporters for perceived
bias in their coverage of the Tibet protests, with some
reporters receiving death threats.
"If allowed to continue, the reporting
interference and hate campaigns targeting international media
may poison the pre-Games atmosphere for foreign journalists,"
said Melinda Liu, President of the Foreign Correspondents Club
of China.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu
Jianchao denied the Chinese public harbored anti-Western
sentiment.
"What they want is only impartial and fair
media coverage. That is legitimate," Liu said.
China has lashed out at human rights groups
and some European and US politicians who have, in China’s
words, tried to politicize the Games and raised the prospect
of an Olympic boycott in light of the crackdown on protests in
Tibet.
Olympics chiefs have praised the city’s
preparations and its showpiece stadiums, the Bird’s Nest and
Water Cube, have drawn wide acclaim.
"The Beijing Organising Committee has put a
tremendous amount of effort into putting on a great Games for
the athletes," the IOC said in a statement.
"It is currently fine-tuning its operations and we are
satisfied by the assurances that we have received across a
number of areas of Games preparations, ranging from media
service levels to environmental contingency plans for improved
air quality."