2022 BEIJING WINTER OLYMPIC: BEIJING, China- Olympic flame arrives in Beijing
Volunteers hold the Olympic torch and the frame on stage during a welcome ceremony for the Frame of Olympic Winter Games Beijing 2022, held at the Olympic Tower in Beijing, Wednesday, Oct. 20, 2021. A welcome ceremony for the Olympic flame was held in Beijing on Wednesday morning after it arrived at the Chinese capital from Greece. While the flame will be put on display over the next few months, organizers said a three-day torch relay is scheduled starting February 2nd with around 1200 torchbearers in Beijing, Yanqing and Zhangjiakou. (AP Photo/Andy Wong)
‘October 21, 2021
.
.
.
BEIJING (AP) – The Olympic flame arrived in Beijing yesterday amid a boycott of the February 4-20 Winter Games.
Beijing’s Communist Party Secretary Cai Qi, the top official in the Chinese capital, received the flame at a closely-guarded airport ceremony.
Beijing successfully hosted the Summer Olympics in 2008.
Activist groups disrupted the flame lighting ceremony in southern Greece on Monday.
International Olympic Committee (IOC) officials said they are committed to seeing the competition go ahead.
Speaking in the ancient stadium of Olympia, IOC President Thomas Bach said the Games must be “respected as politically neutral ground”.
Beijing is the first city to be awarded hosting rights to both the Summer and Winter Games, largely as a result of the reluctance of European and North American cities to bid for the 2022 edition.
China said spectators from outside China won’t be allowed to attend the Winter Games because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and athletes must remain in a bubble to guard against the spread of coronavirus. China has largely stamped-out domestic transmission of the disease, the first cases of which were detected in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late 2019.
At yesterday’s flame handover ceremony, Deputy Beijing Mayor Zhang Jiandong said the city was committed to holding a “simple, safe and excellent Games”.
China and the IOC have collaborated to design a truncated torch relay that reduces the number of routes and personnel involved, Zhang said.
“We insist on prioritising public health and safety, and coordinate the torch relay with pandemic control and prevention requirements,” Zhang said.
The flame will be placed on display over the next few months, with a three-day relay scheduled to start on February 2, involving around 1,200 torchbearers in Beijing, suburban Yanqing and Zhangjiakou in neighbouring Hebei province where ski jumping and other outdoor events will be held.