Olympic torch relay relegated to parking lot send-off in Japan

 

TOKYO -- It was supposed to all start with a gala send-off at one of Japan's most venerable and majestic Buddhist temples, the 1,400-year-old Zenkoji.

Instead, the Beijing Olympic torch will make its Japan debut in a parking lot. If you want a good view, now's the time to join the riot police.

They will likely have all the front-row seats.

Mounting problems with the Japan leg of the relay are merely the latest in a string of embarrassments for Beijing, which had hoped the journey of its torch worldwide would be a showcase of solidarity and support for its games, which will begin in August.

Following China's harsh crackdown on Tibetan protesters in February, that hope has sputtered badly.

Protests or extremely tight security have marred the torch on virtually every stop it has made, including emotional scuffles in London and Paris, a massive detour in San Francisco and orders for police in Nepal to shoot if necessary when the torch makes its way up the Himalayan mountains.

The torch's run through India, adopted home of the Dalai Lama, the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader, was whittled down to a virtual sprint under a 15,000-strong police presence through a tightly guarded government sector in New Delhi. In Malaysia, police quickly shut down a protest by three Japanese, who unfurled the Tibetan flag and yelled "Free Tibet" before getting roughed up by Chinese supporters of the games.

In Jakarta, Indonesia, a shortened, invitation-only relay was to take place Tuesday outside a sports stadium. Members of the public were barred from attending.

More problems were expected in Australia, the torch's next stop.

Organizers of the Australian leg said Monday the route there had been shortened by four kilometers (2.5 miles) to avoid some central, narrow streets.

Torch relay organizer Ted Quinlan predicted several protest "hot spots" and said the route could be changed if protests got out of control.

"We have to have our contingency arrangements, at least in our heads, and ready for everybody to adopt should it become necessary," Quinlan told Sky News television.

Hundreds of police will guard the torch when its run through Canberra on Thursday. Security officials have erected metal barricades along the 16-kilometer (10-mile) route.

Protests were already revving up in Japan.

The often harassed and rerouted torch relay was to hit the streets of the mountainous city of Nagano in central Japan that hosted of the 1998 Winter Games on Saturday.

But well before the flame's arrival, it was causing quite a stir.

Last week, officials at Zenkoji, which was often showcased during the Nagano Games, said they would not make good on their promises to host the start of the relay event, citing security concerns and unease among its monks and supporters over China's treatment of their fellow Buddhists in Tibet.

Adding insult to injury, Zenkoji announced Tuesday that it will co-host a prayer ritual for Tibet on the morning of the relay.

Tsering Dorjee, who was born in India as the son of Tibetan exiles, said the event is to pray for peace.

"We want to mourn for all the people who died in Tibet and pray for peace," Dorjee said in a statement published on his group's website Tuesday. "We are not opposing the Beijing Olympics. We are not opposing the torch relay, nor do we intend to sabotage the event."

Zenkoji's sudden about face forced organizers to conduct a last-minute search for an alternate site. On such short notice, they found only a vacant lot, but said they were satisfied because it is spacious enough to fit a good-sized crowd and close enough to mean no major changes in the relay route would be required.

Several thousand police will be mobilized to secure the relay, according to local reports. Japan has refused entry to a Chinese security squad that has followed the flame elsewhere.

After Nagano, the torch goes on to Seoul, South Korea, then a possible breather in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang.

Pyongyang is tightly controlled even when there are no special events going on, and protests were unlikely.

Copyright 2008 by STATS LLC and The Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and The Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
 
 
 

CBS Sports is a registered trademark of CBS Broadcasting Inc. SportsLine is a registered service mark of SportsLine.com, Inc.