sport

Mike Tyson

-_Mike_Tyson_-__Ben_Heine_.jpg

by Ben Heine

Hosting the Olympics won't improve your life

pechino001.jpg

As the Beijing Olympics ended, Amnesty International today accused the Chinese authorities of prioritizing image over substance as it continued to persecute and punish activists and journalists during the Games.

pechino002.jpg

“The Beijing Olympics have been a spectacular sporting event but they took place against a backdrop of human rights violations, with activists prevented from expressing their views peacefully and many in detention when they have committed no crime,” said Roseann Rife, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific Deputy Program Director in Hong Kong.

pechino003.jpg

Housing rights activist, Ye Guozhu , is being held in police custody after completing a four-year prison sentence in connection with his attempts to draw public attention to alleged forced evictions in Beijing due to Olympics-related construction. The police said he would be kept in detention to keep him and his family out of trouble until the Olympics and Paralympics were over. On 26 July, the police sent the family an official detention notice stating that Ye was being held at Xuanwu district police detention centre on suspicion of “gathering a crowd to disturb order in a public place”, but provided no further detail. Amnesty International received reliable reports that police beat him with electroshock batons before his trial and he was subjected to further beatings in prison.

pechino004.jpg

Two elderly women, Wu Dianyuan (aged 79) and Wang Xiuying (aged 77) were accused of “disturbing public order” and assigned to one year of RTL after they applied to demonstrate in one of the official protest zones. They had been petitioning the authorities since 2001 when they were evicted from their homes to make way for a development project. Beijing city officials ruled that they would not have to serve their time in an RTL facility as long as they ‘behaved’, but that restrictions would be placed on their movements.

Source: Amnesty

Illustration: unknow

On cafebabel: Hosting the Olympics won't improve your life

Oscar Pistorius

oscar_pistorius.jpg

"I don’t see myself as a disabled. I am just a man without legs."

Oscar Pistorius of South Africa runs the 400 meters. He has both legs amputated and dreams the Olympic games.

"I am unilateral amputee and Oscar has two prostheses that improve his performance, especially the 200 and 400 meters. Let him run with the unilateral amputees is not fair."

Marlon Shirley is from USA and world record man in the 100 meters for amputees.

"The spring in the limbs gives Pistorius a three to four meter stride which is not humanly possible and hence an unfair advantage."

Davies is spokesman of the International Association of Athletics Federations.

In your opinion, can Oscar take part in the Olympic games?

Drawing by Gianluca Costantini

Entries feed