Norman Bellingham (R), chief Operating Officer of the
United States Olympic Committee, gives the torch to torchbearer Lin Li at the
McCovey Cove, the start of the Olympic torch relay in San Francisco, the United
States, yesterday. San Francisco is the sixth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic
Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland.--Xinhua
The Olympic torch relay in San Francisco was concluded yesterday afternoon,
without major incidents.
The relay ran for two and half hours along the San Francisco area with the
closing ceremony being held at the airport.
Chinese Olympic swimming champion Lin Li, who was the first runner of the San
Francisco relay, began her run by holding the torch high and waving to a
cheering crowd. Nearly 80 torch-bearers, including some world-record holding
athletes, participated in the relay.
San Francisco police announced the route had been changed due to threats by
Tibetan separatists and their supporters to storm the relay, according to local
TV KRON4.
At one point, Tibetan separatists tried to disrupt the torch relay. They
tried to grab the torch, but were pushed back by police escorting the torch
relay, a Xinhua correspondent witnessed.
Thousands of people gathered along the route of the relay under a sunny sky
to show their support for the torch run in the U.S. city, which is the sixth leg
of the torch's global journey.
Supporters of China's role as host of the Games were upholding Chinese
national flags and displaying the Beijing Olympic mascot Fuwa on the city's
waterfront.
Dozens of women dressed in red performed a drum dance to entertain people,
drawing applauses from spectators. One dancer, Li Hua, told Xinhua that they
traveled about 5 hundred miles from Los Angeles to witness the historic torch
relay.
Siu Yuen Chung, Chairman of the Chinese American Association of Commerce
(CAAC), said before the start of the torch relay that, to give the Olympic flame
a spectacular reception, tens of thousands of Chinese Americans will come out to
cheer the torch relay.
While anxiously expecting the torch relay, many San Francisco citizens
expressed dismay at attempts to link the Olympic Games with politics.
Shirley Olivo, a 75-year-old San Francisco native and grandmother of a
Special Olympian, said carrying the torch and the Olympics shouldn't really be
about politics.
the global torch relay started on April in Almaty and stopped over in London
and Paris before came to San Francisco on Tuesday.
The relatively smooth run of the San Francisco relay stood in striking
contrast those in London and Paris where Tibetan separatists repeatedly
disrupted the torch relay to the indignation of locals and Chinese communities.