"We are all sorry for what has happened," Wang Wei, the executive
vice-president of the Olympic organizing committee BOCOG, told a
news conference.
"We believe all issues can be resolved by
dialogue."
International Olympic Committee spokeswoman Giselle Davies said:
"Conflict is not what we want to see. It is contrary to what the
Olympic ideals stand for."
The fighting in Southern Ossetia, a breakaway enclave of Georgia,
erupted at the same time as the Beijing Olympics opened in the
presence of Georgian and Russian athletes and with Russian Premier
Vladimir Putin among the spectators in Beijing's National Stadium.
Sad precedence
It came despite a call from the United Nations to respect the
Olympics Truce and for warring parties to cease all hostilities
worldwide during the Games. It was the first time that a conflict
began on the opening day of an Olympics.
"The Olympic Truce is the heart of what our values stand for," said
Davies, but added that it had to be implemented by the UN. "It is a
sad reality that a number of countries are in conflict."
Davies said it was not appropriate for the IOC to comment on the
fact that the 2014 Winter Games' host city of Sochi was close to
South Ossetia.
"It is wrong to make any assessment here in perspective to the
Games," she said.
Davies also said that the conflict, and politics in general, was
not discussed when IOC president Jacques Rogge met with Putin on
Friday.
China
calls for ceasefire
Olympic host China meanwhile joined many other countries Saturday
in urging both sides to seek dialogue.
"The Chinese side expresses its solemn concern over the escalation
of tensions and armed clashes in South Ossetia," foreign ministry
spokesman Qin Gang said in a statement. "China calls on the
concerned sides to exercise restraint and cease fire."
(Deutsche Welle)
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