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Beijing torch begins COVID-shortened relay; Pope hails Paralympians, refugee athletes in Olympic message

Beijing, China
Reuters

Beijing’s COVID-shortened Olympic torch relay began on Wednesday with basketball great Yao Ming and a Chinese soldier wounded in a bloody 2020 border clash with India among the first to carry the symbolic flame on a journey that will last only three days.

The route taking the flame to landmarks including the Great Wall is far more modest than the globe-spanning tour ahead of Beijing’s 2008 Summer Games that was disrupted by protests.

China Beijing Winter Olympics Olympic Torch Relay

 President of Chinese Basketball Association and Ice and Snow Sports Promotion Ambassador Yao Ming relays the Olympic flame at the Olympic Forest Park, on 2nd February. PICTURE: Reuters/Yew Lun Tian

Because of COVID-19, only selected members of the public will witness the relay, as will be the case during the 4th to 20th February Games, which take place inside a “closed loop” keeping competitors and other Olympics personnel away from the public.

“That is, of course, bad luck but what can you do?”, Georgios Iliopoulos, Greece’s ambassador to China and a torch-bearer, said when asked if he was worried that the 2022 Games would be remembered as the “corona Olympics”. 

POPE HAILS PARALYMPIANS, REFUGEE ATHLETES IN OLYMPIC MESSAGE

Pope Francis paid tribute Wednesday to Paralympians and refugee athletes, offering his best wishes for a successful Beijing Olympics and calling for sports to “make a more fraternal world”.

Francis told his weekly general audience ahead of the Winter Games that sports can create “bridges of friendship and solidarity” and that the “true gold medal” is one of solidarity among people of different nations, cultures and faiths.

Francis gave special recognition to Paralympians.

“We will win the most important medal together if the example of athletes with disabilities helps everyone to overcome prejudices and fears and makes our community more welcoming and inclusive,” he said.

And he offered a special greeting to refugee athletes, saying he was particularly touched by their personal stories. 

“May their testimony help to encourage civil societies to open up with ever greater trust to all, leaving no one behind,” Francis said.

Francis, a lifelong soccer fan, has long preached about the need to integrate migrants into society, and the benefit of sports for young people. Inspired by his priorities, the Vatican has fielded sporting teams that include migrants and people with disabilities, most recently in a charity soccer match that also featured members of the Roma community alongside Swiss Guards.

AP

“You cannot stop life and we do the best we can to continue with what we have to deal with,” he said before carrying the red-and-silver spiral that resembles a fluttering ribbon.

COVID-19 and China’s battle against it was reflected in Wednesday’s lineup, which included Pang Xinghuo, vice director at the Beijing Center for Disease Prevention and Control and a regular at coronavirus media briefings.

Movie director Zhang Yimou, who is reprising his 2008 role as opening ceremony director, was torch-bearer number 134. 

“I really hope Gu Ailing can win a medal,” Zhang told Chinese media, referring to the US-born freestyle skier also known as Eileen Gu, who is competing for China. 

The flame will travel to competition zones before ending its journey with the lighting of the Olympic cauldron at Friday’s opening ceremony.

Wednesday’s event began when Chinese Vice Premier Han Zheng lit a torch from a cauldron in the shape of traditional vessel known as a zun, then handed it to 80-year-old Luo Zhihuan, who as a speed skater was China’s first winter sports world champion.

The first day ended at Big Air Shougang, a former steel mill that was turned into an Olympic venue.

Among Wednesday’s torch-bearers was Qi Fabao, a People’s Liberation Army regimental commander who was seriously wounded during a 2020 border clash with Indian troops that killed four Chinese soldiers.

Asked during the sub-freezing morning how he felt as an Olympics torch-bearer, Yao, who played for the Houston Rockets, said: “Pretty cold, because the previous two times were for the Summer Olympics. But it’s warm to hold a flame in the winter.”

– With NORIHIKO SHIROUZU, JING XU AND RYAN WOO.

Correction: The picture with this article has been corrected.

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