http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/protests-spark-torch-relay-chaos/2008/04/07/1207420302060.htmlPROTESTERS made good on promises to spectacularly interrupt the Beijing Olympics torch relay through Paris last night, with the flame twice extinguished, according to wire reports, after it was taken out of the way of demonstrators.
It was the second embarrassment in as many days for China, after clashes in London on Sunday in which demonstrators against China's crackdown in Tibet turned the torch relay into an ugly and chaotic farce.
Organisers, including Chinese officials, discussed "pulling out" of the day-long London relay after just a few hours, as police fought running battles with wave after wave of anti-China protesters.
China denounced the London protests as "vile behaviour", while the International Olympic Committee president, Jacques Rogge, insisted there was no momentum for a Games boycott.
In Paris yesterday, security officials extinguished the Olympic flame after police in jogging gear brought it aboard a bus to move it away from protesters, Associated Press said.
About 3000 police - on motorcycles, in jogging gear and on roller blades - oversaw the relay as it departed the Eiffel Tower and crisscrossed Paris.
The French media rights group Reporters Without Borders, which disrupted the lighting of the flame in Athens, hung a black banner condemning China's human rights record from the Eiffel tower.
A member of the French Greens party had earlier been restrained by police when trying to grab the torch from the first of 80 torch-bearers, the former world 400 metres hurdles champion Stephane Diagana.
Escorted by security, Diagana was wearing a badge reading "For a better world", an initiative decided by the athletes' commission of the French Olympic committee.
As the relay started, hundreds of demonstrators waving banners gathered on the Trocadero esplanade, on the other side of the river Seine from the Eiffel Tower.
The flame arrived in France yesterday after the London stop, where police battled to keep pro-Tibet protesters away from the torch and made 37 arrests.
The head of Reporters Without Borders, Robert Menard, denounced the security arrangements. "All that is missing is an appeal to Parisians to stay at home along the lines established in Beijing, where only officials welcomed the Olympic torch on a Tiananmen Square emptied of passers-by," he said in a statement.
The flame's Paris leg comes days after the French President, Nicolas Sarkozy, became the first European leader to raise the possibility of not attending the opening ceremony in Beijing on August 8. "Our Chinese friends must understand the worldwide concern that there is about the question of Tibet, and I will adapt my response to the evolutions in the situation that will come, I hope, as rapidly as possible," Mr Sarkozy said last month. Asked about a boycott, he said he did "not close the door to any possibility".
France's Foreign Minister, Bernard Kouchner, insisted yesterday that no conditions had been set for Mr Sarkozy's attendance but repeated that all options were still on the table.
The protests highlight Europe's growing unease with supporting the Olympics in the face of the Chinese authorities' brutal crackdown in Tibet last month and its harsh criticism of the exiled Tibetan leader the Dalai Lama. Critics also cite China's record of stifling general dissent..
Officials and politicians in Germany, the Czech Republic, Estonia and Poland are in favour of skipping the opening ceremony.
* China yesterday tried to discredit claims that security forces killed protesters in the recent unrest, saying a list of 40 supposedly dead people was "totally fake".
Would really hate to be a torch carrier this year.
Sif you wouldn't punch one of them in the head for trying to ruin your fun.