|
Urumqi, China: Authorities in China's troubled far-western region of Xinjiang are telling people who want to watch the Olympic torch as it passes through the area to stay at home and tune into the television instead.
Spectators, who in other parts of China have thronged streets to get a glimpse of the torch, were also banned from climbing trees or collecting on bridges under which the flame will pass, state media said on Monday.
The steps are a measure of the sensitivity which surrounds Xinjiang, an oil-rich border region which is home to the Muslim Uighur people, some of whom Beijing blames for a series of attacks in the name of agitating for an independent state.
"Considering that too many people will cause a lack of safety, we are recommending that everyone watches on the television from home," the official Xinjiang Daily quoted the Communist Party boss of the region's sports administration, Li Guangming, as saying.
The torch, whose progress around the world had been dogged by anti-Chinese protests, will be paraded through Xinjiang's regional capital on Tuesday before heading to the mainly Uighur city of Kashgar, not far from the Pakistan and Afghanistan frontier.
A three-day tour of Tibet was supposed to precede this leg but the schedule was altered after a three-day suspension for the Sichuan earthquake.
A curtailed trip to the Himalayan region will now follow after the torch leaves Xinjiang, organisers said.
Xinjiang is home to 8 million Uighurs, many of whom resent the growing presence and economic grip of the Han Chinese.
|