Plaudits roll in for China
China won global plaudits Monday for staging a successful Olympics, but rights groups remained critical while Japan expressed hope the event would propel the communist-ruled country towards democracy.
After the Games ended Sunday with a spectacular closing ceremony, the state-run Chinese press also hailed the event as a fitting climax to three decades of a phenomenal development and a showcase of modern China.
The response to the Games from Japan, China's neighbour with which it has a history of uneasy relations, was one of cautious optimism, reflecting views elsewhere around the world.
"Holding the Olympics was good in terms of China taking a more democratic path. We believe this is an irreversible path," Japanese government spokesman Nobutaka Machimura told reporters.
"While the reformist, open-door policy is said to be making progress in China, it is not always leaping forward."
Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd spoke positively about the Olympics and what they meant for the world, saying the Games represented China's "public opening act" at the dawn of an Asia-Pacific century.
"I think our friends in China have hosted a highly successful Olympic Games," said Rudd, a fluent Mandarin speaker who was once a diplomat in Beijing and attended the Games opening ceremony.
"Let's remember that these Games have been free of violence and this is a very uncertain world that we live in."
He played down the controversies over human rights, such as the military crackdown in Tibet, that swirled around China before and during the Games.
"I don't know of a single Olympic Games in recent history which has not generated controversy of one sort or another," he said.
Germany's Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said the Games were important because they had helped China open up to the world.
As the host country of the next Olympics, Britain chose its words carefully. London 2012 organising committee chief Sebastian Coe said before the closing ceremony "there wasn't a good deal wrong" with the Beijing Olympics.
"The city has opened up and people are mixing like they did in Moscow when I was there in 1980," he said.
The United States was still to comment on the Games specifically after the closing ceremony.
The Chinese press was saturated in national pride and avoided mention of controversies.
"The Games was a historic climax of three decades of China opening to the world," said the English-language China Daily, which is targeted at a foreign audience. "It was also a moment for the world to take a new look at China."
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