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Olympic flame - Mother flame remains alive, no effect by Paris dousing MIL/TTC/Agencies, Apr 8, 2008. Author: IR Summary/Amit Roy London: April 7, 2008 - As per traditions, the Olympic flame must be kept alive until the closing ceremony of the Games in Beijing. The question arises whether the Olympic flame is not supposed to be kept burning all the time on its journey from Greece, until it reaches Beijing where it is used to set alight the cauldron for the entire duration of the Games? The answer is yes and no. The question about whether the flame should be kept live is being asked because the torch had to be doused thrice in Paris yesterday because of pro-Tibet demonstrators and, at least, once in London yesterday. There is no need to worry because there is a “mother flame” which is kept burning all the time inside a sealed container and which feeds the torches. Therefore, it doesn’t really matter if one of the torches goes out — the mother flame is used to light another. This is just as well because judging by the gathering protest in London and now Paris, those who re-lit the torches will be kept busy while the flame travels 85,000 miles in 20 countries, passing through India on April 17 and getting to Beijing on August 8. The mother flame is looked after at all times by 10 well-built Chinese “flame attendants”, though after the way they roughly shoved onlookers out of the way in London yesterday, the Daily Mail today preferred to describe them as “thugs”. Others have called them “Chinese security agents”. The torches, the lanterns and the team of attendants, plus other security, fly in a specially chartered Air China plane bearing an Olympic flame design. The torch, which is fuelled by propane, is used to carry the flame during each day’s relays, when runners carry it, mostly on foot. But there are several lanterns, which are lit from the same source, and they keep the flame alive at night or on aircraft when the torches are extinguished. During air travel, where open flames are not allowed, the flame burns in the enclosed lanterns, which act like miner’s lamps. It is the job of the attendants to make sure the mother flame never goes out. The lanterns spend each night in a single hotel room with three guards, one of whom must be awake at any time. “Security people try their best to keep the flame safe,” a spokeswoman for the Beijing Organising Committee has told the BBC. “The flame is always burning, whether on the plane or during the relay or overnight.” More: | |
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