Hu stands by Games pledges, web curbs lifted
By Benjamin Kang Lim and Karolos Grohmann
BEIJING (Reuters) - President Hu Jintao said China would stand by pledges made when it was awarded the Olympics as Games officials deflected fire over Internet censorship on Friday by lifting restrictions.
Hu told reporters the Games, one week away, would have an enduring benefit for China and leave a positive "spiritual legacy".
"The Chinese government and the Chinese people have been working in real earnest to honor the commitments made to the international community," the normally media-shy Hu, who doubles as Communist Party chief, said.
China and the International Olympic Committee (IOC) are under fire from critics who say neither has lived up to pledges the country made to improve its rights record and lift Internet censorship for the Olympics.
IOC press chief Kevan Gosper said this week that some IOC officials cut a deal to let China block sensitive websites to the media, despite repeated promises of a free Internet. On Friday officials said there would be unrestricted access.
"The issue has been solved," IOC vice-president Gunilla Lindberg told Reuters.
"The IOC Coordination Commission and BOCOG met last night and agreed," she said, referring to Beijing's Olympic organizers. "Internet use will be just like in any Olympics."
'EYE TO EYE'
The issue of Internet censorship was only the latest of a series of issues, from human rights, to reporting restrictions, to China's policies in Darfur and Tibet, that have prompted criticism of its Communist leadership.
Although Internet access will be free for reporters for the period of the Games, it is still tightly controlled for the rest of the country.
Hu made a plea for the Games not to be politicized. Many had hoped the Olympics would lead the country of 1.3 billion on a path toward greater political reform to match years of breakneck growth that has made it the world's fourth-largest economy.
"I don't think that politicizing the Olympic Games will do anything good to addressing any of the issues," Hu said.
"It is only inevitable for people from different countries and regions may not see eye to eye with one another on some different issues," he said.
But critics said China itself was to blame for any politicization of the Games.
"The IOC and the Chinese government I think are the ones to be held accountable here ... I think the blame related for anything related to the politicization of the Olympics really falls on their shoulders," Lhadon Tethong, executive director of Students for Free Tibet told a teleconference on Friday. Continued...






