Political clouds lifted for China at Games
BEIJING (Reuters) - It could hardly have been a worse run-in to the Olympics for China's government.
Western protests over Tibet wrecked the Olympic torch's international parade, global personalities pondered whether to boycott the opening, and athletes fretted about the Beijing smog.
It all seemed to be reaching a crescendo right before the start with images of hazy skies flying round the world, militants ambushing police and journalists up in arms at blocked websites.
Then China's lucky number seems to have worked.
At eight o'clock on the eighth day of the eighth month of the eighth year of the century -- the number is associated with fortune here -- the Games opened with a pyrotechnic big bang in the jaw-droppingly impressive Bird's Nest stadium.
It was as if the politics went up with the fireworks.
Sports took centre-stage, the exploits of Michael Phelps, Usain Bolt and Team China dominating thousands of headlines.
"Leading into Beijing, everyone was talking about the politics, but I think once people got here, they really focused on the sports," America's Carl Lewis, no stranger to the Cold War politics swirling round the 1980s Olympics, told Reuters.
China's Communist leaders have been quiet during the Games, preferring to take in a few sports and gee up their athletes rather than seek attention with grand-standing or speeches.
"That is (President) Hu Jintao's style, just let things go on," said David Zweig, China expert at Hong Kong University of Science. "These Games needed to go well to help China feel confident internationally. The leaders will be thrilled."
Widely touted beforehand as one of the most politicized Games of all time with huge potential for trouble as a magnet for political protests or extremist attacks, the 16 days of competition passed off remarkably unruffled.
On track and podium, nobody so much as flashed a "T" for Tibet. Instead, Jamaican sprinter Bolt's purely sporting arrow mime is probably the best-remembered public gesture.
CHINA CHANGES GEOPOLITICS
On the streets, Beijing had its best air quality in a decade, there were plenty of sunny days, and athletes suffered more from the heat than the smog. "Nobody's died, nobody's been collapsing because of the air. And the people who turned up in the airport with masks on, they just looked stupid," a Western diplomat said.
World leaders came and went without any major incidents. Continued...



