Bar owners say security sweep chokes Beijing Games
By Ian Ransom
BEIJING (Reuters) - Heavy-handed security measures to ensure the Beijing Olympics pass without incident are threatening to choke the cultural life from the city and leave Games tourists cold, Beijing bar and club owners said on Friday.
Staff at several night spots near Beijing's Workers Stadium, venue for Olympic soccer qualifiers, were clearing out their bars on Friday after police ordered shut-downs three days before a mandated deadline.
"I didn't like the way they went about closing everybody, it would have been better if they had stuck to the date they told us," a manager at one of the venues told Reuters.
"I don't think we'll get any compensation. There's no point asking for it, you just hope that they'll offer some," said the manager, who requested anonymity.
Beijing, which has declared terrorism to be the greatest threat to the Games, has also come down hard on local entertainment venues, demanding that owners attend anti-drug seminars and conduct searches of patrons.
One bar owner in Sanlitun, Beijing's main entertainment district, said the constant police checks and shut-down threats bordered on harassment, and tighter visa approval procedures have kept tourists away hurting business badly.
"There's not exactly a big Olympic vibe going on now, I can tell you ... We're about 50-70 percent down in business. We're more dead now than we would be on a cold week night in winter," the bar owner said.
In addition to demanding bars close by 2 a.m., police have also started conducting heavy-handed raids, checking patrons' identities and fining bars heavily for hiring entertainers not directly employed by their companies. Continued...







