UPDATED ON:
Monday, April 28, 2008
10:00 Mecca time, 07:00 GMT
 
News Asia-Pacific
N Korea gives torch smooth welcome
China's state-run media says the torch relay through  Pyongyang will 'astonish the world' [Reuters]

The Olympic torch has been paraded through the streets of North Korea's capital in front of thousands of flag-waving masses in a protest-free event for China.

 

The incident-free parade on Monday came in contrast to the leg in neighbouring South Korea, where pro- and anti-China demonstrators clashed on Sunday despite a large police presence.

 

The first runner in the North Korean torch relay was soccer legend Pak Du Ik.

 

Soccer legend

 

Pak played as part of North Korea's 1966 World Cup soccer team that made a historic run to the quarter-finals.

 

As he began the 20-kilometre route through Pyongyang, thousands of cheering people lined the city streets waving pink paper flowers and small flags with the Beijing Olympics logo.

UNICEF, the UN children's agency, had earlier been asked to participate in the North Korean leg of the relay.

 

But it withdrew in March, saying that it questioned whether the event would help its mission of raising awareness of conditions for children.

The torch arrived early on Monday by plane from rival South
Korea
, where China's treatment of North Korean refugees sparked protests against the relay.

On Sunday, clashes broke out in Seoul near the relay start between a group of 500 Chinese supporters and about 50 demonstrators criticising Beijing's policies.


The students threw stones and water bottles as some 2,500 police tried to keep the two sides apart.

Diplomatic 'regret'

 

Lee Yong-joon, South Korea's deputy foreign minister, expressed strong
regret over the clashes in a meeting Monday with Ning Fukui, China's ambassador to Seoul.

 

Ning also said he regretted the "extreme behaviour" by some young Chinese and expressed his condolences to police and a journalist who was injured, the South's Foreign Ministry said.

Police said four other people were arrested for trying to disrupt the relay.

 Source: Agencies
 
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