Fights Break Out As Chinese Stampede For Last Olympic Tickets

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ANITA CHANG | July 25, 2008 03:19 PM EST | AP

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Beijing police strain to keep the crowd behind a fence while they wait to buy tickets for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Friday, July 25, 2008, in Beijing,.. Eager fans swarmed and in some cases scuffled as they lined up at sales windows Friday to get the final batch of tickets for next month's Olympics. (AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty)

BEIJING — A crowd of 30,000 people, baking in the heat and waiting for up to two days, swarmed a ticketing center Friday as the final batch of Olympic tickets went on sale. Police shoved and kicked them and used metal barricades to prevent a stampede.

The Aug. 8-24 Beijing Games are the first Olympics expected to be sold out, and some fans spent the night on thin bamboo mats and newspapers for a chance to buy the 250,000 tickets that went on sale in different parts of the city.

At the main ticket office not far from the national stadium known as the Bird's Nest, tempers flared as sticky bodies pressed against each other in the surging crowd before sales began at 9 a.m. Police yanked more than half a dozen unruly fans from the crowd, kicking one who fell as he was being led away and dragging another by his hair.

"It was very dangerous. I was afraid," said Wang Zhenqiang, who waited 28 hours with Ji Liqiang, a fellow businessman from eastern Shandong province, to buy tickets to the diving competition.

Hundreds of police and paramilitary troops tried to control the crowd, with lines of officers throwing their weight into hastily erected metal barricades to hold back the throng. There was no line; fans were allowed to pass through the police barricade in groups of 25 to 50, streaming toward the two-dozen-plus sales windows.

Scuffles broke out as officials opened additional windows at the last minute, causing some fans to stampede ahead of others.

"People got hurt around me. They fell and injured their knees and elbows. A barricade was bent out of shape by the crowd," Wang said.

In the scramble, Wang and his friend ended up with tickets to synchronized swimming, instead of the diving competition _ where China is a gold-medal favorite.

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"We all could see there would be a huge problem, and it became very chaotic," Ji said. "This also shows the Chinese government lacks the ability to deal with public crises."

Temperatures topped 93 degrees with 94 percent humidity on Friday, and some of the fans fainted in the heat. Some men stripped off their shirts during the long, muggy wait and police restraining the ticket buyers also handed out bottles of water.

Thousands also waited in western Beijing for 20,000 tickets for basketball. Another 570,000 tickets went on sale for preliminary round soccer matches in the cities of Tianjin, Shanghai, Shenyang and Qinhuangdao. There were no reports of major problems at the other sites.

Zhang Xiaojing, 17, who came from Changzhou in Hebei province with her cousin and three friends, said the line at the main ticket office was fairly orderly when she arrived Thursday afternoon. But in Friday's rush, only three of her friends were able to elbow their way close enough to buy tickets.

"If I'm going to be disappointed, I'm going to be disappointed. But I'm so tired. I didn't sleep last night," she said after spending the night playing poker with friends.

Security officials also scuffled with journalists trying to report on the sometimes-chaotic scene. Some reporters were escorted away after going into off-limits areas, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

Hong Kong television showed several journalists pushing back against police. Hong Kong Cable TV showed a policeman putting his arm around the neck of one of their reporters and pulling him to the ground.

The reporter said he was assaulted after his crew refused to leave a media zone, Cable TV reported. They were seen surrounded by dozens of police.

A spokeswoman for Hong Kong Cable TV said the authorities' behavior was "unacceptable."

"We hope the authorities will live up to their earlier promise to allow full freedom of the press during the Olympic games," said Shum Siu-wah.

Open media coverage of unexpected events away from Olympic venues has been a question for these games. Beijing is on record promising complete freedom to report for foreign journalists, but already broadcasters have had their work interrupted.

An Olympic official defended the police actions, saying they were trying to keep order in the crowd of more than 30,000 people.

"There were many, many people over there and I think the police had to do their job and they had to keep order," said Sun Weide, spokesman for Beijing's Olympic organizing committee. He refused to comment on whether the sales process was poorly planned.

A Beijing police duty officer refused to comment, referring questions to a Xinhua report on the sales. The article said hot weather and the long wait caused some people to become impatient. Police imposed temporary measures, including limiting access to some areas, to maintain order, it said.

The high turnout underscores the demand for Olympics tickets, particularly among Chinese. In November, organizers had to suspend one round of domestic sales after overwhelming demand crashed the ticketing system. Officials switched to a lottery.

The official ticketing provider for the games has said every event in every venue was expected to be sold.

"We predict that this will be the first ... 'sold out' Olympics," Jonathan Krane, the head of Ticketmaster in China, said in May.

Ticket sales for past Olympics varied widely. The 2004 Athens Olympics sold only about two-thirds of 5.3 million tickets available, and there were many empty seats.

The Beijing Games are likely to be played in front of full venues, although tickets that went to sponsors and the national Olympic committees of participating countries may not all get used.

In all, 6.8 million Olympic tickets have been available for domestic and foreign sales.

The most expensive tickets are for the Aug. 8 opening ceremony, which cost $645. Organizers said 58 percent of all tickets would cost $12.90 or less, in line with efforts to make them affordable to average Chinese citizens.

___

Associated Press Writer Dikky Sinn in Hong Kong contributed to this report.

BEIJING — A crowd of 30,000 people, baking in the heat and waiting for up to two days, swarmed a ticketing center Friday as the final batch of Olympic tickets went on sale. Police shoved and kic...
BEIJING — A crowd of 30,000 people, baking in the heat and waiting for up to two days, swarmed a ticketing center Friday as the final batch of Olympic tickets went on sale. Police shoved and kic...
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- jaycasey I'm a Fan of jaycasey 2 fans permalink

As one who lives in China I'm not at all surprised by this chaos. China is chaos. People don't know what a queue is and think nothing of butting in front of others. Every situation, whether trying to order at a fast food restaurant or buying a train ticket becomes a stressful altercation just because the Chinese don't know how to take turns. You'd think that after 5,000 years of civilization they'd have figured out the benefits to getting in an orderly line and taking turns. Until Chinese learn how to queue they can't really be a civilized country. You couldn't pay me enough to get me to go to the Olympics in China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:35 PM on 07/26/2008
- darthdarcy I'm a Fan of darthdarcy 48 fans permalink
photo

Free Tibet

End the support of genocide in Dufar...

End the support for the murderers of the Burmese....

Boycott Wal-Mart...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:16 PM on 07/26/2008
photo

Is ticket stampeding the new Olympic sport?

Judges score = 0.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 PM on 07/26/2008
- waiguoren I'm a Fan of waiguoren 8 fans permalink
photo

Anyone ever heard of overpopulation?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 07/26/2008
- emerywood I'm a Fan of emerywood 4 fans permalink

A " Sold Out " Olympics ? That is unheard of.
Wouldn't that be a slap in the face of those HuffPo bloggers who have been trying so hard to discourage people from attending the show and to boycott the Beijing Olympics ? Turns out the Chinese don't need foreigners to fill up the stadiums.
Do they have a Plan B to put down China ? Let's see it !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:24 PM on 07/25/2008
- jaycasey I'm a Fan of jaycasey 2 fans permalink

There's plenty of Chinese to fill the seats but the big disappointment from Beijing is that only one-fifth of the number of foreigners they were expecting are actually coming. Many foreigners who bought tickets can't get visas to get into the country because of China's security measures. The hotels in Beijing are hurting bad because the boon they were expecting didn't materialize - now they are offering big discounts on rooms. Not exactly what I'd call a big success if China was hoping to impress the world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:41 PM on 07/26/2008

Wow. Fights broke out among the Chinese to get the last tickets to the Olympics. I wish I had some tickets to attend the nationally known event! However, I enjoy reading blogs from one of the Olympic sprinter, Shawn Crawford. Read and follow his journey from training to the Olympics. http://urbanthoughtcollective.com/author/shawncrawford/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:16 PM on 07/25/2008
- steamboat I'm a Fan of steamboat 45 fans permalink

Nice to know Chinese citizens now have money to waste on tickets for recreational and sporting events. Back in the old-days they were happy to have a bowl of rice.......Getting to be like us more everyday. Pretty soon they'll be crying like us how tough things are while driving their car around, buying $100 tickets for a rock concert, and spending $100 at a sporting event.. Oh yeah, complaining while drinking their $3 starbucks coffee or $1 bottled water .Yep, getting to be more like us everyday.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 AM on 07/25/2008

It'll be a long time ( hopefully) before Cheinse will be like Americans. Chinese have a amazing work and study ethics; Chinese respect the elders in their family; China is capably led by their politicians.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 PM on 07/25/2008
- steamboat I'm a Fan of steamboat 45 fans permalink

When are those politicians up for re-election? If its so bad here why haven't you moved?.......Some of what you said I regretfully have to agree with you on. Although NOT all Americans. We took care very good care of my dad until he passed on. And no other nation, no other people, give more money to charities then do Americans. More then everybody else combined..............

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 07/25/2008
- jaycasey I'm a Fan of jaycasey 2 fans permalink

Is MagisterLudi one of the 30,000 Internet censors and comment manipulators that China employs to control online communications and expression? There's a lot of really nice Chinese people but I'll take American culture anyday.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:49 PM on 07/26/2008

great photo op.

just wondering if this is just staged?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 AM on 07/25/2008
- rwe I'm a Fan of rwe 21 fans permalink

NO , this was not an Obamassiah appearance

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 PM on 07/25/2008

paranoya will destr0y ya...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:06 PM on 07/25/2008
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