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Olympic torch completes relay in Tanzania
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08:35, April 14, 2008

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The Beijing Olympic flame completed its eighth leg of the torch's global tour at this largest city of Tanzania, Dar Es Salaam on Sunday.

The relay started its relay in drizzle on Sunday afternoon from the Tazara, the railway station of Dar es Salaam. Tanzanians staged traditional dances like frisk dancing, folk saltation and fire dancing, initiating the city relay.
Tanzanian Vice President Mohamed Shein lit the torch at the start of the relay, and said: "I am excited that Tanzania is only country out of 53 African nations to host the relay. Tanzania unreservedly supports the Beijing Olympics. It is the occasion of a lifetime."



Torchbearer John S. Akhwari (C) runs with the torch in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, April 13, 2008. Dar es Salaam is the eighth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland.


Torchbearer Liu Xinsheng, who is also Chinese Ambassador to Tanzania, runs with the torch in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, April 13, 2008. Dar es Salaam is the eighth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland.



Gulam Rashid, the president of Tanzanian Olympic Committee, said, "I would wish to thank IOC and BOCOG for their good decision of selecting the city of Dar Es Salaam to be among 21 cities in the world and the only city in Africa for the Beijing 2008 Olympic torch relay to be held."


Torchbearer Gen. Lansana Palenfo (C) runs with the torch in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, April 13, 2008. Dar es Salaam is the eighth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland. (Xinhua Photo)

The first torch bearer was Tanzanian Minister of State for Union Affairs in Vice President's Office Mohamed Seif Khatib.

The last one to wrap up the relay was United Nations Under Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN-HABITAT Anna Tibaijuka.


Torchbearer Lina M. Mhando (C) runs with the torch in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, April 13, 2008. Dar es Salaam is the eighth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland.(

"I am very proud that Tanzania is celebrating this moment. We have been given a great honor," she said. "This is a moment of solidarity for Tanzania, Africa and the world in the spirit of the Olympics."

Tibaijuka is the first African woman elected by the UN General Assembly to the position of UN Under-Secretary-General.


People wave Chinese national flags while waiting for the Olympic torch on roadside in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, April 13, 2008. Dar es Salaam is the eighth stop of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games torch relay outside the Chinese mainland.

Highlighting torchbearers were John Stephen Akhwari, an athlete in the 1968 Olympics of Mexico City, Uganda athlete Dorcus Inzikuru and Mustapha F. Damiri, a HIV carrier.

"It's a great honor and top privilege to hold the flame in my home country," said Akhwari. "When I hold the flame, I feel I am the center of the world and I am the attention of people from all around the world. So I am so excited for my leg of 60 meters."

The Dar es Salaam route was streamlined to five kilometers, so each bearer could run around 60 meters.

John Stephen Akhwari, born in 1938, was an Olympic athlete at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. He represented Tanzania in the marathon.

During the race he fell, badly cutting his knee and dislocating the joint. Rather than quitting, he continued running. He finished last among the 74 competitors.

When asked why he continued running, he said simply, "My country did not send me to Mexico City to start the race. They sent me to finish." His story is featured in the Beijing 2008 SongHero.

Dorcus Inzikuru, born in 1982, is a Ugandan athlete competing in steeplechase. She won the inaugural world title in women's 3000-meters steeplechase, as well as the first Commonwealth Games title in the event.

"It's so great to be here as a guest and greater to carry the Olympic flame," said Inzikuru. "The experience of being a torchbearer will leave a legacy for my career and once-in-life legacy for my life."

The enthusiasm of local residents was largely flared up in a day of scorching-after-rainstorm.

"It's so touching to see kids take off their shoes and socks when a pool of water submerged a section of the route," said Qu Yingpu, the torch relay spokesman.

"In this moment, no hindrance for the Olympic passion and Olympic spirit of participation."

It is the first time for the Olympic flame to come to East Africa and the second time to arrive in Africa after the Athens Olympic torch relay landed in the continent in 2004.

Dar es Salaam is the largest city in Tanzania. It is also the country's richest city and a regionally important economic center.

Dar es Salaam is actually an administrative province within Tanzania, and consists of three local government areas or administrative districts: Kinondoni to the north, Ilala in the center of the region, and Temeke to the south.

The Dar es Salaam Region had a population of three million. Though Dar es Salaam lost its official status as capital city to Dodoma in 1996, it remains the centre of the permanent central government bureaucracy and continues to serve as the capital for the surrounding Dar es Salaam Region.

The relay in Dar es Salaam, the city dubbed "harbor of peace", covered five kilometers and lasted about two hours.

The flame is going back to Asia in midnight for its ninth leg of global journey in Muscat of Oman.

Source:Xinhua



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