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mar.25.2008

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC)will not support a complete or mini Boycott of the Beijing Olympic Games.

"While we are not insensitive to the issues surrounding the political aspects currently fueling the debate.We are not in support of a Boycott in any form,"said TTOC president Larry Romany."We share the view that other than unnecessarily and unfairly punishing athletes, Olympic boycotts accomplish absolutely nothing."

International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge and Beijing Olympic organizers are confident that the Games will be a success despite threats of boycotts and a decision by Hollywood director Steven Spielberg to pull out as an advisor to the opening and closing ceremonies.

Rogge expects many heads of state - including US President George W. Bush, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy - to attend the opening ceremony.


mar.25.2008

The Olympic torch has been lit at a ceremony in Greece that was briefly disrupted by pro-Tibet activists.

Protesters from media rights group Reporters Without Borders broke through the cordon of 1,000 police officers in Olympia as China's envoy spoke.

Activists had vowed to protest over the violence in and around Tibet.

The torch will now be carried around Greece before being sent to China to start a journey through 20 countries, returning to Beijing on 8 August. The route includes the torch being taken to the top of Mount Everest and through Tibet. As Liu Qi, head of the Beijing Olympic organising committee, spoke ahead of the torch lighting, three men broke into the ceremony venue.

One ran up behind him attempting to display a black flag depicting the Olympic rings made from handcuffs.

The men were from the France-based media rights watchdog Reporters Sans Frontieres (Reporters Without Borders, or RSF), which has called for a boycott of the opening ceremony of the games.

They were quickly bundled away by police and Mr Liu continued his speech uninterrupted.

The live television coverage, beaming the scene around the world, quickly cut away from Mr Liu and the protesters until they had been removed.

"We cannot let the Chinese government seize the Olympic flame, a symbol of peace, without denouncing the dramatic human rights situation in the country," RSF said in a statement.

Later, as the torch began its journey, pro-Tibet activists unfurled banners and shouted slogans before Greek security wrestled them away.

Despite cloudy weather, the torch was lit using the sun's rays The head of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), Jacques Rogge, has defended the decision to hold the Games in China saying: "The major political leaders don't want a boycott".

In his speech during the ceremony, Mr Rogge said the Olympic torch relay and the Games should take place in a peaceful environment.

"The torch is the link between all athletes and citizens of this world; between all of us who believe in Olympism and the virtue of sport. It has the force to unite humanity and to stand for harmony."

He told the Associated Press news agency on Monday that he was engaged on a daily basis in "silent diplomacy" with Beijing on Tibet and other human rights issues. Source: www.bbc.co.uk


abr.01.2008

Dexter St Louis's dedication,determination and commitment regardless of difficulties and challenges are the attributes that have earned him qualification for the Beijing Olympics said TTOC president Larry Romany.

"I extend to him our(TTOC) sincere congratulations,it is excellent news.He deserves it and has earned just reward for his work ethic,courage and indomitable will.He has been the flag bearer for T&T table tennis for a long time"said Romany.

St Louis won qualification for the Olympics during the Olympic qualifier taking place in Dominican Republic.


abr.02.2008

Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC) president Larry Romany and secretary general Brian Lewis will travel to Beijing,China this week to represent the TTOC at the Association of National Olympic Committee(ANOC)General Assembly which will be held from 7-10 April.

The two national Olympic officials will also attend meetings with the Beijing Olympic Organizers(BOCOG) and visit the games venues ,athletes village and other games related facilities.

"We will address with the Beijing officials all the logistical and administrative matters in an effort to ensure that every thing is in place for the T&T delegation." said Romany.

The TTOC meetings will incorporate media ,marketing and intellectual properties and rights discussions.

The T&T Olympic chief expects that the ANOC General Assembly will receive comprehensive and candid updates on all the potential concerns that could impact the games.

The IOC has come under increased international pressure to try to exert influence on the Chinese government over a series of political issues.

"The main focus of the secretary general and myself during the Beijing meetings is the successful delivery of the games operation and the success of the Beijing Games for the T&T delegation."

The TTOC according to Romany started planning for the Beijing Olympics seven years ago when Beijing won the bid.

"Our scenario planning looked at every aspect.With four months to go we are paying even closer attention to the details.There is nothing currently taking place that is a surprise to us"added Romany.


abr.08.2008

The president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), Jacques Rogge, has expressed concern over recent unrest in Tibet.

Speaking at an IOC meeting in Beijing, Mr Rogge said the IOC "called for a rapid, peaceful resolution of Tibet".

He also condemned attempts to disrupt the Olympic torch relay, saying violence "is not compatible with the values" of the Olympic Games.

Protests are taking place in Paris in the latest leg of the torch relay.

Sun Weide, a spokesman for the Beijing Olympic organising committee, said demonstrations on Sunday in London - which saw protesters trying to douse and even snatch the Olympic flame - were the work of "a few Tibetan separatists", the Associated Press reported.

The official Chinese news agency Xinhua says attempts to sabotage the relay "will surely arouse the resentment of peace loving people".

The BBC's James Reynolds in Beijing says the Chinese government seems to be adopting a policy of delaying the reporting of protests and then playing down their significance.

Xinhua took six hours to respond to the protests, our correspondent says, and the state-run China Daily newspaper ran the headline "Warm reception in cold London" - together with a picture of Prime Minister Gordon Brown applauding the torch's arrival.

The Chinese have made sure that for a few hours, Paris will look like Tiananmen Square Robert Menard Reporters Without Borders

The demonstrations have been sparked by China's security crackdown in Tibet following a series of protests against Chinese rule which swept the region last month.

Tibetan exile groups say Chinese security forces killed dozens of protesters. Beijing says about 19 people were killed in rioting.

Mr Rogge made his comments in a speech at the beginning of a three-day meeting of National Olympic Committee heads in the Chinese capital, Beijing.

Our correspondent in Beijing says that although Mr Rogge has made similar remarks before, the fact that he was speaking in China appears to give his comments extra weight.

The Olympic torch arrived at Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport late on Sunday after being flown from London with a Chinese security detail. China has expressed disgust at the torch protests in London

Hundreds of police are being deployed on the streets of Paris to protect the Olympic torch relay from opponents of China's actions in Tibet.

Pro-Tibet activists have said they plan to hold demonstrations in the capital.

However, Jan Willem, spokesman for the International Campaign for Tibet, told the BBC that the protest in Paris will not disrupt the torch relay.

Mr Willem said supporters will gather for a demonstration at the Place du Trocadero, which will include music by French and Tibetan artists, then march together to the Eiffel Tower.

"We have consistently asked our members and supporters to hold peaceful demonstrations which don't disrupt the torch relay, so we will focus on the issues which matter for Tibetans inside Tibet," Mr Willem said.

The 80 runners are being guarded on the 28km (18 mile) route by a cordon of 65 motorcycles, 200 police on rollerblades or running nearby, and 200 riot police.

Police plan to secure a 200m (660ft) perimeter around the torch as it is carried from the Eiffel Tower, down the Champs-Elysees towards City Hall, then over the River Seine to the southern Charlety athletics stadium.

A man tried to snatch the torch from TV presenter Konnie Huq in London

The Paris police chief has said the flame will be protected like a head of state.

The head of the Paris-based media watchdog, Reporters Without Borders, said it had altered its initial plans for similar demonstrations because of the expected heavy police presence, but nevertheless promised something "spectacular".

"The Chinese have made sure that for a few hours, Paris will look like Tiananmen Square," Robert Menard said. "I think it's shameful."

Police hope the elaborate security "bubble" will protect the relay from the persistent pro-Tibet protests which disrupted its passage through London.

Thirty-seven arrests were made in London on Sunday as protesters tried to seize the torch and disrupt the relay.

At one point, the torch was transferred onto a bus to protect it from the demonstrators.

The torch was lit in Olympia, Greece, last week and will go through 20 countries before being carried into the Beijing Games opening ceremony on 8 August.

Source: www.bbc.co.uk


abr.08.2008

Protests and boycotts are almost another category of Olympic sport.

In fact, it is quite rare for the Games to pass off without controversy.

"The Games are very easy targets for boycotts," Tony Bijkerk, Secretary-General of the International Society of Olympic Historians told me.

"I don't agree with them, as they hurt the athletes more than anyone else. But the Games provide a world-wide podium for protest every four years. And there is not much the Olympic movement can do about it."

When Barcelona held its successful Games in 1992, it was the first time since the Rome Games in 1960 that there were no boycotts.

Those were the heady days when the Cold War had just ended and another source of boycotts, apartheid, had also disappeared. South Africa was welcomed back that year.

Beijing's opportunity to show China's advancement into the modern world has also given demonstrators their chance to return to what is really an old Olympic tradition of protesting.

It goes back to 1908, when Irish athletes, angered at the refusal of Britain to give Ireland its independence, boycotted the Games in London.

On a smaller scale, the US team refused to dip its flag to King Edward VII in the opening ceremony.

"This flag dips to no earthly king," was the captain's comment. The US tradition of dipping its flag to nobody has continued since and will provide its own little side story when London is the host in 2012.

In 1932, there was a preview of the problems that would come four years later when, in Los Angeles, an Italian winner gave a fascist salute on the podium.

The Berlin games in 1936 (awarded to Germany before Hitler came to power) "would have to take the first prize for the most controversial", according to the Olympic Historians' Society Vice President David Wallechinsky.

The Nazis drenched the games in propaganda. There were calls for boycotts - and actual boycotts by some Jewish athletes.

But the United States did attend after Avery Brundage, President of the American Olympic Committee, overcame calls for a US boycott.

The irony is that the Games are now also remembered for the performance of the black US athlete Jesse Owens, who won four gold medals under Hitler's nose.

Incidentally, the Olympic torch relay idea was started by the Nazi organisers of the 36 Games as part of their self-glorification effort. It remains to be seen if, after this year's protests, the relay survives. I

After World War II, the Games resumed, but the Cold War began. There was a flavour of that in Helsinki in 1952, when the Soviet athletes stayed on their side of the border and came across only to compete.

In 1956, in Melbourne, the troubles in the Middle East made themselves felt when Egypt, Iraq and Lebanon stayed away because of the Suez invasion by Britain and France. The Cold War had an impact when the Netherlands, Spain and Switzerland refused to go because of the Soviet crushing of the Hungarian revolution.

Tokyo in 1964 saw boycotts from Indonesia and North Korea over an argument about their athletes competing in some rival games and South Africa was banned because of its racial policies.

Mexico's 1968 Games were marked by two very different protests. In the first, students demonstrated against the government about ten days before the Games and were fired on by the Mexican army. More than 200 students were killed.

Then, during the games, two black US runners, Tommy Smith and John Carlos, raised their hands in a black power salute from the podium. They were expelled on the grounds that political gestures are banned from Olympic ceremonies, but they had a huge impact.

The most disastrous games of all, in which protest moved into violence, was in Munich in 1972.

Gunmen from the Palestinian Black September group got into the Israeli compound, by climbing over an unguarded fence, and by the end eleven Israeli athletes had been murdered. The Games paused for a memorial event - and then went on.

Political influence continued in Montreal in 1976, when 26 African and Caribbean countries held a boycott because New Zealand, which had played rugby in South Africa, was allowed to compete.

Montreal started another trend in controversy - the cost of the Games. It plagued Athens and is plaguing London.

The biggest boycott of them all came in 1980 when 62 countries led by the United States stayed away from Moscow following the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan the previous year.

Retaliation followed in Los Angeles in 1984. The Soviet Union led an Eastern bloc boycott.

The Games were at a low ebb. Politics had nearly taken over.

The Seoul Games in 1988 saw something of a recovery, and even North Korea's refusal to attend, annoyed that it was not the co-host, impressed only Ethiopia and Cuba, who stayed out in sympathy.

Recovery was celebrated in a big way in Barcelona four years later and although the Atlanta Games in 1996 were marred by a bomb explosion, they were also largely free of protests.

Sydney in 2000 was judged one of the best Games ever. Athens, while hit by a large bill, went off smoothly as well.

But Beijing has shown that protests are always ready to erupt.

London can hardly be immune.

Source: www.bbc.co.uk


abr.08.2008

The Association of National Olympic Committees(ANOC)General Assembly is entering its third day at the China World Hotel in Beijing,China.

Yesterday's session started at 9am and ended at 6.35pm,with an hour and a half break for lunch.

All two hundred and five national Olympic committees are represented and the five hundred plus representatives would have gotten an earful regarding the status of all aspects of the upcoming Beijing Olympic games.

Naturally with the opening ceremony only four months away,NOC presidents and Secretary generals seized the opportunity to ask hard and searching questions of the Beijing Olympic Games Organising Committee(BOCOG).

The BOCOG senior staff and high level managers are composed ,competent, well prepared and unwilling to deviate from the technical manuals and IOC rules.So the standard response is a polite and courteous sorry but we have to say no.

This adherence to the"rules and provisions" while making for good order lends itself to contention and hard feelings.

TTOC president Larry Romany while acknowledging that the Beijing officials are bent on sticking to the rules believes it is a reality that NOCs will have to except.

"The Olympics is about people ,so there will always be the need for flexibility in the application of the rules and guidelines,but BOCOG is taking a strict line ,I don't foresee that they will deviate but that aside they seem to be well on top of things"

With a large media contingent in attendance most of the media questions asked surrounds Tibet.However NOC officials appear to have other priorities.

With haze and a smog like atmosphere greeting NOC officials everyday since their arrival ,there is unease about the issue of pollution and the air quality.

BOCOG officials are however giving the assurances that the Chinese government is paying close attention and working very hard at solving the problem and improving the air quality.

The die however has been cast says the T&T Olympic chief "There is no turning back now.So we just have to trust the Chinese officials regarding their efforts to address the pollution and air quality concerns"

Romany is satisfied that the Chinese are ready to stage a fantastic Olympic Games.

On Friday the visiting NOC officials will be taken on a tour of the Olympic venues.

The TTOC officials are expected to return to T&T on Saturday 12 April.


abr.08.2008

Source: www.bbc.co.uk, written by Michael Slater.

Paula Radcliffe believes Beijing's heat and humidity will be more of a threat at the Olympics this summer than the Chinese capital's pollution.

Beijing's air quality has been flagged up as a potential problem for athletes in endurance events like the marathon.

But Radcliffe, who has asthma, believes the risks have been exaggerated.

"I need the right dosages of my asthma medication but after that I don't think it's something you can worry about too much," Radcliffe told BBC Sport.

"It might not even be as bad as everyone thinks because I'm sure the Chinese will do everything they can to reduce the problem.

Beijing will be a cleaner Games than Athens and Sydney - we're going in the right direction Paula Radcliffe on doping "And the effects of pollution are usually felt after a race.

"Will I really care if I wake up the next morning with a sore throat and feeling a bit sick if I have got what I want the day before? No, probably not.

"We're all dealing with the same thing so I don't think worrying about it in advance is that productive.

"But heat and humidity are a different kettle of fish because they are things you can prepare for. I'm concentrating more on those factors than the pollution."

Radcliffe's comments follow confirmation last month that Ethiopian great Haile Gebrselassie, the men's world record-holder for the marathon, will not run the distance in Beijing as he is worried about his asthma.

And Justine Henin, the defending Olympic tennis champion, is another asthmatic unwilling to risk her health in Beijing.

But Radcliffe, who holds the women's marathon world record, is determined to add an Olympic gold to her remarkable haul of medals, records and big-race victories.

The 34-year-old English star has won golds at every other major championship - over a variety of distances and surfaces - but an Olympic medal of any colour has eluded her.

Sprinted out of track medals in 1996 and 2000, Radcliffe was the favourite for marathon gold in 2004 but quit, in some distress, with six kilometres left - a bad reaction to anti-inflammatory drugs she was taking for a leg injury had left her unable to absorb fuel.

"When I was a little girl it was always the Olympics that I thought of as the pinnacle," said Radcliffe, who was speaking at the launch of Nike's latest running aid, the Nike+SportBand.

"So an Olympic gold would be right up there in my list of achievements - it's the one you really want to win.

"I haven't been able to do that yet but, fingers crossed, I've got a good chance this year - probably my best shot.

"You can't overstress about it but I want to make sure everything is 100% for Beijing."

It was with this in mind that Radcliffe, who took most of 2006 and 2007 off to have a child, reluctantly withdrew from this weekend's London Marathon, a race she has contested and won three times.

A nagging toe injury was to blame for that decision but Radcliffe, who has been back in full training for the last two weeks, is certain there will be other opportunities to run marathons in London again, not least at the 2012 Games.

"In terms of goals, I want to win another world title and I want to run faster. On the right day in the right conditions, I believe that's possible," she said.

"But I also want to perform at another Olympics and running in London would be incredible. The atmosphere, the memories and the pride at representing your country in Britain will be so special.

"I want to carry on for that. I'm not sure my legs will hold out for 2016, though!"

Radcliffe is probably right about that but anybody who saw her winning performance at last year's New York Marathon - her first race over that distance since the birth of her daughter Isla - will have a sneaky suspicion she might just do it.

But as well as being confident of her 2012 chances, Radcliffe is also optimistic about her sport's fight against doping.

"I wouldn't say it's a completely level playing field just yet, but we're getting closer," she said.

"Beijing will be a cleaner Games than Athens and Sydney. We're going in the right direction."


abr.08.2008

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Beijing has said "no force" can stop the Olympic flame relay, as it faces protests on the US leg of its journey.

Seven demonstrators have already been arrested in San Francisco after tying "Free Tibet" banners to the cables of the Golden Gate Bridge.

The flame arrived in the city early on Tuesday amid heavy security, following anti-China protests in Europe.

International Olympic Committee (IOC) members will discuss the torch relay in meetings in Beijing in the coming days.

IOC President Jacques Rogge said he was "deeply saddened" by the protests in London and Paris and concerned about the next leg of the flame relay in San Francisco.

The IOC is unlikely to scrap the rest of the international leg of the Beijing torch relay, says the BBC's Olympics correspondent Gordon Farquhar.

What is most likely is that the Beijing international relay will continue, and a decision will be taken after the Games in China about the desirability of holding international relays before future Games, our correspondent adds.

The flame was lit in Olympia, Greece, on 24 March and is being relayed by torch through 20 countries before being carried into the opening ceremony at the Beijing Games on 8 August.

But the torch had to be put out three times in Paris because of the protests.

The flame itself was kept alight in a safety lantern.

Demonstrators are protesting at China's security crackdown in Tibet after recent unrest against Chinese rule.

Tibetan exile groups say Chinese security forces killed dozens of protesters. Beijing says about 19 people were killed in rioting.

Chinese state TV said the protesters in London and Paris were a "handful of Tibetan separatists".

Condemning the disruption to the relay, Beijing Olympic organising committee spokesman Sun Weide told reporters the torch relay would continue as planned.

"No force can stop the torch relay of the Beijing Games," he said in Beijing.

But the International Olympic Commitee, currently holding a meeting in the Chinese capital, is to discuss whether torch relays should continue for future Games.

IOC press commission chief Kevan Gospar said that this year's 137,000km torch relay will continue as planned, "but certainly, the IOC executive board should review the torch relay programme for the future".

Swedish IOC member Gunilla Lindberg said the protests were "damaging the Olympic movement".

"Using the torch this way is almost a crime. This is the property of the IOC, it is not a Chinese torch."

Police in San Francisco, where the torch is due to be relayed on Wednesday, arrested seven people on Monday and charged them with conspiracy and causing a public nuisance.

Three climbers among them faced additional charges of trespassing.

They had scaled the bridge to perch 150 feet (46m) above traffic, attaching "Free Tibet" banners and a Tibetan flag.

One of them, Laurel Sutherlin, spoke by mobile phone to reporters.

"If the IOC [International Olympic Committee] allows the torch to proceed into Tibet they'll have blood on their hands," he said.

US Democratic Party presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has called on President George W Bush to boycott the opening ceremony of the Olympics unless China improves its human rights record.

The Paris relay started to go wrong almost from the start, despite the presence of 3,000 police along the route.

It was cut short with the torch finally carried by bus to the relay's end point.

Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoe cancelled a ceremony to welcome the torch relay after Green party activists hung a Tibetan flag and a black banner depicting the Olympic rings as handcuffs from the city hall.

Activists also hung Tibetan flags or black banners from several other Paris landmarks including the Eiffel Tower and Notre Dame cathedral.

On Sunday, 37 people were arrested in London as protesters disrupted the torch relay there.


abr.09.2008

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Thousands have massed in San Francisco to protest against China's policies as the Olympic torch sets off on the only North American leg of its journey.

A sizeable number of pro-Beijing demonstrators are also on the streets, prompting fears of violence.

Shortly before the relay began, police announced the route would be shortened. A massive security operation is in place, with barricades on many streets.

There were disruptive protests as the torch passed through London and Paris.

Meanwhile, President George W Bush has urged China to "begin a dialogue" with Tibet's exiled spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama.

The US House of Representatives has overwhelmingly passed a motion condemning China's "extreme" response to protests in Tibet.

In San Francisco, police leave has been cancelled. Officers are out in force along the planned seafront route of the torch, and the airspace above has been declared a no-fly zone.

Just before the torch was lit, police said the relay route would be cut roughly by half but have not yet confirmed the new route.

"We are trying to accomplish two goals here. One is to protect the right to free speech and the other is to ensure public safety, and here in San Francisco we are good at both of those things," said Nathan Ballard, a spokesman for San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, said earlier.

Pro- and anti-Beijing demonstrators are mingling on the streets, prompting some concerns of violence. Television pictures showed China supporters shoving a Tibet activist.

At least one protester was detained before the relay started.

Hundreds of anti-Beijing protesters rallied in the city on Tuesday, after activists hung banners from the city's famed Golden Gate Bridge on Monday.

Tibet is not the only issue prompting the protests - China's policies towards Sudan, Burma and members of the banned Falun Gong spiritual movement are also being opposed.

Officials in Beijing have condemned the disruption that has accompanied the torch so far - but promised that the procession would continue.

However, correspondents say more trouble could force officials from the International Olympic Committee - set to meet in Beijing on Thursday - to consider calling off the rest of the torch's 136,788 km (85,000-mile) journey.

Supporters of Beijing are also out on the streets President Bush urged China to open talks with the Dalai Lama, who he called a "peaceful man... who is not for independence, but for the cultural identity of the Tibetans being maintained".

Meanwhile, the president's spokeswoman struck a more hesitant note than she has in the past when asked whether the president would attend the opening ceremonies of the Games.

Dana Perino said it was "extremely premature" to confirm what the president's schedule would be in August.

A spokeswoman for UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he would not be attending the opening ceremonies - but had never intended to. He will be at the closing ceremony.

In Washington, meanwhile, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a resolution criticising China's "disproportionate and extreme" response to protests in Tibet.

By 413 votes to one, the House called on China to release Tibetans imprisoned after peacefully demonstrating, and allow international monitors and journalists unfettered access to Tibetan areas of China.

But in a statement before the vote, a spokeswoman for China's foreign ministry accused the resolution's supporters of choosing "to remain silent on the violence involved in beating, smashing up properties, looting and arson in Lhasa - and the Dalai clique who premeditated and organised the criminal act of violence".

The Olympic flame was lit in Greece on 24 March and is being relayed through 20 countries before being carried into the opening ceremony in Beijing on 8 August.

In Paris, the torch had to be extinguished three times, while in London there were 37 arrests.


abr.09.2008

Source: www.ioc.org
© IOC/Richard Juilliart
8 April 2008

Exactly four months before the start of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games, delegations from 205 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) learnt today about the IOC's latest appraisal of the air quality in the Chinese capital. On the occasion of the XVI General Assembly of the Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) currently taking place in Beijing, IOC Medical Director Patrick Schamasch explained the results of an analysis of a set of data which were taken during last summer's test events.

The data included temperature, wind, humidity and SO2, NO2, CO, Ozone and PM10 readings, which were taken by the Beijing Environment Protection Bureau from 8 to 29 August 2007. Subsequently, the IOC Medical Commission evaluated the data on the basis of the WHO 2005 interim target standards. The findings indicate that, at Games time one year out, the health of athletes was largely not impaired. This finding is upheld by the fact that no health issues related to air quality were reported to the IOC by any of the team physicians who looked after athletes competing during the August 2007 test events.

Nor were any such problems reported at the IAAF Junior World Championships that were held in August 2006. Moreover, measures are continuously being taken by the Chinese authorities which can be expected to improve the air quality further when compared with 2006 and 2007.

For outdoor endurance events that include minimum one-hour continuous physical efforts at high level – urban road cycling, mountain biking, marathon, marathon swimming, triathlon and road walk - the IOC Medical Commission’s findings indicated that there may be some risk. The IOC will, therefore, be working together with the relevant International Federations in order to put in place procedures which will allow a “plan B” to be activated for such events if necessary.

Schamasch explained that the procedure will include daily monitoring of air quality and weather conditions at the venue, a reporting process from the Beijing Environment Protection Bureau to the IOC and relevant sports Federations, and a joint IOC-Sports Federation decision to postpone the event if necessary. He concluded: "Be ensured that the health and safety of the competing athletes is of the utmost importance for us".


abr.10.2008

The head of the International Olympic Committee has said anti-China protests had created a "crisis" but that the Games in Beijing would "rebound".

Jacques Rogge told a meeting of national Olympic committees in Beijing that the Games would succeed.

But Mr Rogge urged China to respect its "moral engagement" to improve human rights ahead of the Games.

China said it hoped the IOC would steer clear of what it called "irrelevant political factors".

"I hope IOC officials can eliminate all kinds of disturbance and continue to adhere to principles of the Olympic charter," foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said.

Demonstrators critical of China's rights record and the recent crackdown on protests in Tibet have disrupted the UK, French and US stages of the Olympic torch relay.

The Dalai Lama - who many Tibetans regard as their spiritual leader - said on Thursday that China deserved to host the Games, but that protesters had the right to express themselves in non-violent ways.

Also on Thursday, members of the European Parliament called on EU leaders to boycott the games if there was no resumption of dialogue between China and the Dalai Lama.

Speaking in Beijing, Mr Rogge said: "It is a crisis. There is no doubt about that. But the IOC has weathered many bigger storms."

He said Chinese officials had said that awarding the Games to Beijing would help advance social change in China, including human rights.

Mr Rogge said he considered that "a moral engagement... and we definitely ask China to respect this moral engagement".

However, addressing a joint meeting between the Association of National Olympic Committees and the IOC executive board, he said officials should reassure athletes.

"Tell them that they are going to set an example and that the world will be watching them. We have 120 days to achieve that and I am sure it is going to be successful."

In the US, both Democratic presidential hopefuls have called on President George W Bush to consider boycotting the Beijing opening ceremony if China does not improve its human rights record.

"A boycott of the opening ceremonies should be firmly on the table but this decision should be made closer to the Games [in August]," Senator Barack Obama said a day after a similar call by Senator Hillary Clinton. The US House of Representatives has overwhelmingly passed a motion condemning China's "extreme" response to recent protests in Tibet.

A spokeswoman for UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he would not be attending the opening ceremonies, but had never intended to do so and would be at the closing ceremony.

The Olympic flame was lit in Greece on 24 March and is being relayed through 20 countries before being carried into the opening ceremony in Beijing on 8 August.

The threat of protests has meant that torch-bearers have been immersed in a cocoon of security, surrounded by dozens of police officers and Chinese guards in track-suits.

In Paris, the torch had to be extinguished three times because of safety concerns, while in London there were 37 arrests.

The US stage of the torch relay in San Francisco on Wednesday passed off amid confusion and tight security.

Mr Rogge said he had been "saddened' by violent protests in Europe but he believed the San Francisco relay had been an improvement.

"It was, however, not the joyous party that we had wished it to be," he added.

Demonstrators also sought to disrupt the torch relay in Athens and Istanbul, while it passed successfully through Almaty, in Kazakhstan, and St Petersburg, in Russia.

It is due to arrive in the Argentine capital, Buenos Aires, later this week.

Source: www.bbc.co.uk


abr.11.2008

The Dalai Lama - who many Tibetans regard as their spiritual leader - said that China deserved to host the Games, but that protesters had the right to express themselves in non-violent ways.

The Dalai Lama's message of support for the Beijing Olympics is lost in the spotlight of pro-Tibet and Tibet separatists protest during the Olympic Torch Relay.

The IOC and national Olympic leaders finished a week of meetings in Beijing and many will fly back to their homes in deep thought.

IOC president Jacques Rogge conceded that the Olympic movement is facing a crisis ,but he remains resolute and has urged NOCs not to lose faith assuring them that the movement will weather the storm and rebound.

Reports suggest that there were sharp differences of opinions on how and to what degree the IOC should respond.The eventual statement coming out from the IOC and ANOC joint meeting sought not to offend China.

That reality should surprise no one.The selection process and vote to award Beijing the 2008 Olympic Games would not have been made lightly.In hindsight some are now calling it idealistic and naive.

Commenting after the Beijing meetings,TTOC Secretary General Brian Lewis said that Calls for a boycott of the Beijing Olympics are hypocritical .

"China is a major trading partner and investor in the world economy.Why are there no calls for trade or financial boycotts.China was awarded the games seven years ago.Why the silence all these years?".

TTOC president Larry Romany asserts that the TTOC stands firm in its support of Beijing but both offcials however acknowledge that recent events have shaken the Olympic movement.


abr.15.2008

BEIJING, April. 14 -- Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf yesterday condemned attempts to undermine the Beijing Olympics and opposed the West's "superimposition" of democratic v

alues and human rights on China. "We are extremely glad that preparations for the Olympic Games are so outstanding," Musharraf told China Daily at the Diaoyutai State Guesthouse.

"We condemn any attempt by anyone to undermine the process of Olympic preparations, especially the Olympic torch (relay)," he said.

Musharraf, who has on several recent occasions promised to ensure the torch relay in Islamabad is a success, yesterday lamented attempts by some Western politicians and media to politicize the Olympics by smearing China's Tibet policy and human rights situation.

"First of all, we consider Tibet an inalienable part of China," he said. "If at all anyone is harboring or abetting the separatists, we condemn that.

"You cannot superimpose the human rights and democracy environment of a Western country onto other countries," he said.

"That is the error that the West and the Western media makes. This does not work at all and this must stop."

He said in every country, human rights and democracy have to be tailored according to its own dynamics, which China is doing well.

"The basic responsibility of any government is the security of the nation, progress and development, welfare and well-being of its people. Obviously this is being achieved (in China)," Musharraf said.

"I think China is a typical example of development and progress, the welfare and well-being of its people," he said.

Musharraf flew to Beijing yesterday from Hainan province where he met with President Hu Jintao and attended the Boao Forum for Asia. He will visit Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, on the final stop of his China trip.


abr.21.2008

Term Athlete Development(LTAD) workshop ended on Saturday at the Court Yard Marriot Hotel.

The National Olympic Committee brought in Dr.Frank Dick from England to facilitate the workshop.

The TTOC views LTAD as a critical tool in building the sport development pathway that will increase participation levels ,the development of talent identification structures and elite level athletes.

Thirty two persons representing 17 national sporting associations attended the two day workshop.

The LTAD workshop is another phase in the TTOC coaching and affiliate development programme.

Dr.Ian Hypolite,TTOC Vice-President with responsibility for development said he was happy with the number of participants."The workshop was well received.We (TTOC) will need to continue to build the capacity within Olympic Sport Organizations .We have held a number of courses and workshops and have others planned" he said.


abr.24.2008

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee 2008 Annual General Meeting was held yesterday at the VIP room at the Hasely Crawford Stadium.

TTOC affiliates in attendance received and approved the 2007 Annual report and audited financial accounts.

In presenting the annual report TTOC secretary general Brian Lewis reported to the AGM that the TTOC executive is concerned that more affiliates are not qualifying athletes for the Olympic games and that meetings will be held with affiliates in in an effort to develop a strategy that will increase qualification levels at future Olympic Games.

The AGM also heard that in accord with its strategic plan the TTOC has strengthened its office staff so as to improve the standard of service provided by the TTOC office.

The TTOC secretary general expressed disappointment that the participation statistics done on TTOC courses ,workshops and events showed that the participation is 55 % or less and that some affiliates were showing no interest in providing their coaches and athletes with the opportunity to benefit from the learning opportunities provided by the TTOC.


abr.28.2008

Rugby deserves to be an Olympic sport says Trinidad and Tobago Rugby Union(TTRFU) secretary Brian Lewis.

Lewis who is also the Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC)secretary general believes that the IOC membership may not be aware of it but they are perceived as being discriminatory , unfair and overly subjective in how they decide which sports get on to the Olympic programme.

According to Lewis Rugby is a sport played by men and women across all five IOC Continental region, that will bring its best athletes to the Olympic games and does not have a performance enhancing drug culture .

"The pathway has to be transparent and objective.In so far as a sport meets the IRB criteria and it is not on the Olympic programme in any form or fashion that sport should be given the opportunity to be on the Olympic programme" said Lewis.

Lewis view is that despite the work done by the IOC Programme Commission the IOC members make the decision and therefore the risk of personal likes and dislikes impacting on the decision making process is a reality.

Rugby union football was held at the Olympics in 1900, 1908, 1920 and 1924.But has been out of the Olympic Games since.In 2005 the IRB's efforts to get rugby on to the Olympic games was rejected by the IOC membership

The IOC will next review the Olympic programme in 2009.


may.08.2008

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC) has congratulated Christopher Sellier,Elisha Greene,the Kellar brothers(Ako and Azekewe) on their successes at the 2008 Pan American Cycling Championships Champion.

Yesterday 22 year old Christopher Sellier captured the gold medal in the Keirin with Elisha Greene bagging bronze.T&T had earlier won silver in the Olympic Sprint to tally three medals to date.

TTOC president Larry Romany noted that Christopher Sellier's gold medal is an excellent development .

"The TTOC development committee recommended and obtained Olympic Solidarity support for Sellier last year to attend the UCI training center in Switzerland.It was a decision that saw the TTOC come in for some criticism, but over the years the TTOC has assisted talented athletes who for some reason or the other may not have the wholehearted support of the establishment".noted Romany

Romany believes that T&T's best chance to qualify for the Beijing Olympic games in cycling would have been via the Olympic Sprint.

"It is a concept that the TTOC shared with the cycling federation while it is too late for Beijing.We (TTOC) are confident that T&T can qualify for the London 2012 Olympic Sprint"

"Christopher Sellier's gold medal and the other successes at Pan Am should refocus and open the minds of the cycling fraternity .Objectively talent identify the youngsters with genuine world class potential give them the support and use performance as the yardstick by which they are evaluated" said the national Olympic chief.


may.08.2008

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC) has congratulated Christopher Sellier,Elisha Greene,the Kellar brothers(Ako and Azekewe) on their successes at the 2008 Pan American Cycling Championships Champion.

Yesterday 22 year old Christopher Sellier captured the gold medal in the Keirin with Elisha Greene bagging bronze.T&T had earlier won silver in the Olympic Sprint to tally three medals to date.

TTOC president Larry Romany noted that Christopher Sellier's gold medal is an excellent development .

"The TTOC development committee recommended and obtained Olympic Solidarity support for Sellier last year to attend the UCI training center in Switzerland.It was a decision that saw the TTOC come in for some criticism, but over the years the TTOC has assisted talented athletes who for some reason or the other may not have the wholehearted support of the establishment".noted Romany

Romany believes that T&T's best chance to qualify for the Beijing Olympic games in cycling would have been via the Olympic Sprint.

"It is a concept that the TTOC shared with the cycling federation while it is too late for Beijing.We (TTOC) are confident that T&T can qualify for the London 2012 Olympic Sprint"

"Christopher Sellier's gold medal and the other successes at Pan Am should refocus and open the minds of the cycling fraternity .Objectively talent identify the youngsters with genuine world class potential give them the support and use performance as the yardstick by which they are evaluated" said the national Olympic chief.


may.21.2008

The Trinidad and Tobago Olympic Committee(TTOC) 2008 Olympic Day Relay run will be held at the King George V Park on Saturday 21st June 2008 at 4:00 pm.

The TTOC will introduce a new feature this year.TTOC Affiliates will have the opportunity to promote and showcase their respective sports.

The National Olympic Committee will provide a promotional tent.

TTOC president Larry Romany says that it is an Olympic year and the TTOC will be going all out to ensure that this year's Olympic day activity is fun filled .

"Over the years the relay concept has served to encourage participation and teamwork.While there are attractive cash prizes at stake.The main aim is to foster physical activity and Sport for All"said Romany.

As we do every year Corporate T&T will be invited to participate in the Corporate category said TTOC assistant secretary Wendell Labastide.