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China’s under-20 football team storm off pitch after 6 spectators display Tibet flag

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China’s under-20 football team storm off pitch after 6 spectators display Tibet flag

China’s Under-20 team stormed off the pitch in the first in a series of friendlies against German fourth-division clubs as pro-Tibet activists demonstrated in Mainz.

The Under-20 side is in Germany to play 16 friendlies against lower league clubs in an experiment, which runs until May, aimed at advancing the Asian superpower’s chances at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, but which has courted controversy.

chrome_2017-11-20_09-37-18.jpg

Photo: SID screenshot, via YouTube.

On their debut in Germany on Saturday, the Chinese juniors lost 3-0 to TSV Schott Mainz, watched by a 400-strong crowd plus five camera teams and 25 reporters.

However, the game was halted for 25 minutes as the Chinese refused to continue after a group of six spectators hung out Tibetan flags.




DO61VG1X4AAyjVY.jpg:small




With the match being televised live in China, the juniors only agreed to continue after the protestors from ‘Tibet-Initiative Germany’ — four Tibetan refugees and two Germans — took down the flags.

“We want to draw attention to the unlawful and violent occupation of Tibet and the suppression of fundamental human rights,” one of the activists told the German Press Agency.

The incident left both the German FA and their Chinese visitors red-faced.

“We cannot ban the protests, there is the right to freedom of expression here and certain rules apply,” said Ronny Zimmermann, vice-president of the German Football Association (DFB), which has organised the matches.

“As a guest, you should be able to handle it calmly and stand above such actions.”

“However, we also want to be good hosts and as a result we are not happy with this incident.

“We condemn the use of football as a deliberate provocation against our guests.”

German police did not intervene as the demonstration was peaceful and Schott’s manager Till Pleuger was perplexed by the behaviour of the Chinese.

“We see it as apolitical. Just as the Chinese are allowed to hang their flags, others are also allowed to do the same,” Pleuger told SID, an AFP subsidiary.

Sun Jihai, the head coach of China’s Under-20 team, avoided commenting on his team’s reaction to the flag scandal.

“The team came to Germany to improve their football and to gain experience,” he said.

“I expected football to be talked about, but now it is about something else.

“For me, this was a friendly match and I hope it will just be about football here and nothing else.”

The German FA want to speak to the Chinese delegation to hopefully avoid similar embarrassing scenes before the next match against FSV Frankfurt on Saturday.

“We will now look for a conversation with the Chinese delegation on this topic and recommend they handle such incidents more calmly,” said Zimmermann.

The experiment came about after Angela Merkel’s German government signed a five-year football partnership agreement with China’s vice-premier Liu Yandong last November.

The Chinese juniors will play teams in Germany’s fourth-tier Regionalliga Suedwest (south-west regional league).

Three teams have refused to face the Chinese after their fans protested, but the other 16 clubs in the 19-strong league will each be paid 15,000 euros ($17,634) for playing the junior team.

It is the first time a junior national team will play a series of games against clubs in the German league pyramid.
https://www.hongkongfp.com/2017/11/...rm-off-pitch-6-spectators-display-tibet-flag/
 
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Abraham Lincoln would have backed China’s efforts to end Tibetan serfdom, says senior Chinese official
US President Abraham Lincoln would have supported China’s efforts to end serfdom in Tibet, a senior Chinese official has said.

During a press conference at the 19th party congress on Thursday, Yang Xiaodu, deputy secretary of China’s anti-graft body, answered a question from a CGTN reporter. The state broadcaster’s reporter Robert L. Kuhn asked about the anti-corruption drive and how to achieve a balance between human rights and party discipline.

chrome_2017-10-20_11-32-45.jpg


Yang said that “the question of human rights is a very modern question… so it always has certain conditions.”

He went on to say that he worked in the Tibet Autonomous Region for a long time, and therefore understood that human rights was an interesting question. He recounted how he met a former assistant secretary of state on a visit to the United States.

“I said in the hearts of Chinese people, Lincoln is a hero, because he freed the slaves. On this point the Chinese people and the American people have the same understanding – this is a human rights issue.”

“In turn, we freed the serfs in Tibet, how come American friends cannot understand this? From Lincoln’s perspective, he should have supported China’s overturning of the serfdom in Tibet.”
China claims that the communist government freed the people of Tibet from “misery” and “slavery” under a feudal serfdom controlled by the Dalai Lama and his followers. It celebrates Serfs Emancipation Day every March to celebrate what it calls the freeing of one million Tibetan serfs.

Chinese forces entered Tibet in 1950. Despite China’s insistence that its occupation of Tibet was a peaceful liberation, the Central Tibetan Administration – also called the Tibetan Government in Exile – claims it was “marked by systematic destruction of monasteries, the suppression of religion, denial of political freedom, widespread arrest and imprisonment and massacre of innocent men, women and children.”

Tibetans accuse Chinese officials of repressing their religion, eroding their culture, and economic discrimination. According to the International Campaign for Tibet, 150 Tibetans have set themselves on fire since 2009, a common form of protest against Beijing’s rule.

Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 to free those held as slaves in the rebel states during the American Civil War.

https://www.hongkongfp.com/2017/10/...tibetan-serfdom-says-senior-chinese-official/
@gambit @F-22Raptor
 
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The Chinese players are patriotic. :enjoy:

The protester has freedom to protest and so as Chinese player has the freedom to play on or not.

Frankly, that is not in the benefit of China, because from now on any small number of people will bring their flags and troll the whole state of China.

These are just 6 people with 4 flags.
 
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You think this is a very important match?

I am not talking about this match. I am talking about precedent.

Let's say tomorrow there is a match between China and Germany in the world cup, and some 6 people with 4 flags show up. Are you going to forfeit the match if the people refuse to remove the flags, and the law gives them the freedom to display those flags?
 
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I say just ignore them.. whatever they do won‘t change the reality that China has full control over Tibet - third pole of the earth and the water tower of Asia!:yay:
 
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It's not the first time and it won't be the last, some clowns knowing they are fighting a loss cause, that's it. Next time when German teams visit China we should send some folks bearing Nazi swastika banners to taunt them and claim that we have the freedom to express our opinions. If that's the German tradition to treat their guests and we should reciprocate the same way.
 
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I am not talking about this match. I am talking about precedent.

Let's say tomorrow there is a match between China and Germany in the world cup, and some 6 people with 4 flags show up. Are you going to forfeit the match if the people refuse to remove the flags, and the law gives them the freedom to display those flags?
UK did it couple years ago...their PM had a quite humiliation for it... China is on the winning side.
 
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China’s under-20 football team storm off pitch after 6 spectators display Tibet flag

China’s Under-20 team stormed off the pitch in the first in a series of friendlies against German fourth-division clubs as pro-Tibet activists demonstrated in Mainz.

The Under-20 side is in Germany to play 16 friendlies against lower league clubs in an experiment, which runs until May, aimed at advancing the Asian superpower’s chances at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, but which has courted controversy.

chrome_2017-11-20_09-37-18.jpg

Photo: SID screenshot, via YouTube.

On their debut in Germany on Saturday, the Chinese juniors lost 3-0 to TSV Schott Mainz, watched by a 400-strong crowd plus five camera teams and 25 reporters.

However, the game was halted for 25 minutes as the Chinese refused to continue after a group of six spectators hung out Tibetan flags.




DO61VG1X4AAyjVY.jpg:small




With the match being televised live in China, the juniors only agreed to continue after the protestors from ‘Tibet-Initiative Germany’ — four Tibetan refugees and two Germans — took down the flags.

“We want to draw attention to the unlawful and violent occupation of Tibet and the suppression of fundamental human rights,” one of the activists told the German Press Agency.

The incident left both the German FA and their Chinese visitors red-faced.

“We cannot ban the protests, there is the right to freedom of expression here and certain rules apply,” said Ronny Zimmermann, vice-president of the German Football Association (DFB), which has organised the matches.

“As a guest, you should be able to handle it calmly and stand above such actions.”

“However, we also want to be good hosts and as a result we are not happy with this incident.

“We condemn the use of football as a deliberate provocation against our guests.”

German police did not intervene as the demonstration was peaceful and Schott’s manager Till Pleuger was perplexed by the behaviour of the Chinese.

“We see it as apolitical. Just as the Chinese are allowed to hang their flags, others are also allowed to do the same,” Pleuger told SID, an AFP subsidiary.

Sun Jihai, the head coach of China’s Under-20 team, avoided commenting on his team’s reaction to the flag scandal.

“The team came to Germany to improve their football and to gain experience,” he said.

“I expected football to be talked about, but now it is about something else.

“For me, this was a friendly match and I hope it will just be about football here and nothing else.”

The German FA want to speak to the Chinese delegation to hopefully avoid similar embarrassing scenes before the next match against FSV Frankfurt on Saturday.

“We will now look for a conversation with the Chinese delegation on this topic and recommend they handle such incidents more calmly,” said Zimmermann.

The experiment came about after Angela Merkel’s German government signed a five-year football partnership agreement with China’s vice-premier Liu Yandong last November.

The Chinese juniors will play teams in Germany’s fourth-tier Regionalliga Suedwest (south-west regional league).

Three teams have refused to face the Chinese after their fans protested, but the other 16 clubs in the 19-strong league will each be paid 15,000 euros ($17,634) for playing the junior team.

It is the first time a junior national team will play a series of games against clubs in the German league pyramid.
https://www.hongkongfp.com/2017/11/...rm-off-pitch-6-spectators-display-tibet-flag/

Bide our time, one day, one day, chicken will come home to roost to these hypocritical western colonist pigs
 
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we'd beat few of those scums in 2008 London Olympic torch rally, and the police didnt do anything about it````when sovereign comes in matter, no compassion to those rats
 
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Chinese by their actions gave more press to the cause than protest would have garnered otherwise. Sometimes I fail to understand the IQ part.
 
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