Ottawa Citizen: No boycott - Thousands rally on Parliament Hill in support of Beijing

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No boycott

Thousands rally on Parliament Hill in support of Beijing Games


Maria Cook and Scott Cressman, Ottawa Citizen

Published: Sunday, April 13, 2008

Ottawa . A pro-China demonstration on Parliament Hill Sunday attracted an estimated 5,000 Chinese-Canadians from Ottawa, Montreal and Toronto eager to show support for the troubled Beijing Olympics.
"Olympics is nothing to do with politics," said Jeremy Zhang, a 37-year-old Ottawa chemist who emigrated from China in 2002. "I think our country deserves the Olympics. Sports is a peaceful event to join all people together."

A group of Chinese community associations organized the event following a week of chaotic protests that disrupted the world relay of the Olympic torch. Protesters in Paris, London and San Francisco have condemned Chinese human rights abuses, including recent violent confrontations in Tibet.
ffst.gif
View Larger Image About 5-6,000 people (mostly Chinese-Canadians) jammed Parliament Hill for pro-China rally this afternoon. They wanted to show support for peace and the Olympic spirit. The 2008 Olympic games are in Beijing this summer. There was a small group of Free-Tibet protesters who stayed about a block away from the Hill.

Photo by Mike Carroccetto, The Ottawa Citizen / CanWest News Service




Early in the afternoon, a dozen pro-Tibet protesters crashed the rally.
The shouting, pro-China faction surrounded them, calling them liars paid to disrupt the event, said Nicole Demers, a volunteer with Friends of Tibet.

"They wouldn't let us be 15 people voicing our opinion in a free country."

Police told the counter-protesters that they were not safe and moved the small group down Wellington Street towards the Château Laurier. The protesters, some splattered with fake blood or gagged, waved Tibetan flags there under police supervision.

"The tone was hateful and quite intimidating when there's a dozen Tibetans up against a thousand Chinese," said Russ Hillier, a Carleton student and member of Students for a Free Tibet.

The rally aimed to repeat a party line, not promote truth or justice, he said. "Really, what these protesters are saying is very similar to what the Chinese government is saying."

The flag-waving demonstrators called for a politics-free Olympics that enjoyed the support of the Canadian government. They expressed indignation at "distorted" media reports and opposed Tibet independence.

"Tibet is part of China," said Ling Wang, the 30-year-old Toronto medical researcher. "We don't want anyone separating from our country."

It was a love-in for China. People waved the red Chinese flag, wore "I love China" T-shirts and sang along to songs that stirred nationalist sentiment.

"We want the Canadian government to treat China fairly and to treat the Olympics in a sporting way," said University of Ottawa student Hong Chen.

"Don't boycott it. We know human rights is an issue there. Give China a chance. Let's sit down and talk about it, not mix it with sports. Let the world come together to celebrate sport."

One of the rally's speakers was Henry Lu, chairman of the Chinese Community Association of Ottawa. The excited crowd punctuated his sentences with raucous cheers and flag-waving.

"Open your eyes. If you really want to know China, go there," Mr. Lu said in an interview. "Don't say things from outside."

China would host a strong Olympics despite the disputes, Mr. Lu said. For the sake of long-term relations with China, Canada should support the Games, he said.

China has made real improvements, but the world holds the nation to a different standard, he added. Western media still judge the country too harshly.

"They just try to give China a bad name, a bad image, and they are not doing that on a factual basis," agreed Adam Wang, an Ottawa translator and spokesman for the event.

"We're here to protest the violence perpetrated by the separatist movement in Tibet and their supporters," said Mr. Wang, who has lived in Canada for 20 years. "There is another side to the story; that those people who promote the message of peace actually carry out out the violence."

Mr. Wang, 50, said that Chinese Canadians feel proud that China is hosting the Olympics. "Is China perfect in terms of human rights? No. But it's changing. Boycotts are not effective and can only hurt the feelings of the Chinese people at large."

Yun Bo Liu, 24, a Carlton University biochemistry student who came to Canada six years ago, said the torch protests made him angry. "Tibet is destroying the games. They make people have the wrong image of the Olympics in China. The Olympics are not just for China. It's for everyone in the world. "

"If anyone causes problems with the Olympics, it'll be people who are against peace," said Ophir Kendler, an Israeli-born Carleton graduate student at the rally with his Chinese girlfriend.

"We know China is not good in some ways, but it's getting better and better," said Yuan Liu, a Chinese-born Carleton graduate student.



© Ottawa Citizen 2008


No boycott
 
其实西方人的思维也没有错,错在我们一开始的斗争策略和主攻方向有问题,我们组办奥运会当然好事,西方杯葛就杯葛呗,我不觉得这个有什么损失,你爱来不来吧,金牌全是我们自己的,有什么不好,根本没有必要在内心深处要得到白人的认同,别人不认同你会很痛苦?我们的主攻方向就是反分裂,反暴力,为了国家的完整甚至愿意流血牺牲。奥运会just a game
 
又一篇带有严重偏袒性的报道

看过这篇报道的第一感觉(很可能也是普通加拿大人的第一感觉)是:此次集会是中国人在乞求世界不要过分强调中国的人权问题,不要抵制北京奥运会.
因为报道的开始就引用了ZD关于此次集会的基调与中国政府的如出一辙之类的话,其后引用中国人的话再多给人的感觉也不过是此次集会有很强的中国政府背景.
该报道只字未提集会对西方媒体对西藏事件报道不公正的谴责(本次集会的主要目的之一),而只是用诸如THEY just try to give China a bad name, a bad image, and THEY are not doing that on a factual basis," 中的THEY来模糊一笔带过.
建议大家写信发EMAIL给OTTAWA CITIZEN抗议这种带有偏袒性的报道.
 
建议大家写信发EMAIL给OTTAWA CITIZEN抗议这种带有偏袒性的报道.

Ottawa Citizen 从来都是西方意识形态的铁杆,往中国人身上抹黑已无数次。不用太care这种媒体。
 
Ottawa Citizen的报道算是不错的。虽然是引用中国人说的话,他们愿意登出来,基本上表现他们默认了。好过乱改乱写。
 
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