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The two months long trip for the Olympic torch started today
with its first destination being Kazakhstan. After 21 stops it will
be back in Beijing,
the place from where it started, following an elaborate kickoff ceremony.
According to the Associated Press, President Hu Jintao
presided over the ceremony broadcast to the world on state television. About
5,000 people were present for the invitation-only event. Hundreds of seats
remained empty, with plainclothes security agents in black jackets present in
the crowd.
In Kazakhstan,
the delegation was greeted with flowers by a group of women in traditional
Kazakh dresses and hats, this event being considered a moment of national pride
as the oil-producing nation seeks to raise its global profile and emerge as a
regional player, according to British paper The Guardian. The Olympics
organizing committee considers this visit a symbol of the world’s recognition
of Kazakhstan’s
accomplishments managing to bring even more light on their efforts.
The route is unfortunately monitored by several activist
parties and at all times things must be handled using tight security and with
careful planning.
Pro-Tibet activists, human rights campaigners and groups
seeking to end the crisis in Darfur have
prepared for the 85,100-mile global journey with protests expected in several
major cities.
The People's Daily, the official Communist Party newspaper
said: "With the opening of the Games approaching, the burden on our
shoulders is heavier and the task tougher. We must keep a clear head, improving
our awareness of the potential dangers, and bravely facing all the difficulties
and challenges."
But the commentary said China is prepared for the
difficulties because "to successfully host the Olympics is the wish shared
by 1.3 billion Chinese people," as quoted by the AP.
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