
Last modified: 2024-03-03 by  zachary harden
 zachary harden
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        ![[handcuffs protest flag]](../images/o/oly_cuff.jpg) image
      located by John Udics, 7 April 2008
 image
      located by John Udics, 7 April 2008
      An interesting flag is depicted on a BBC news webpage dealing with a 
	  pro-Tibet protest at the lighting of the flame for this year's Olympic 
	  baton run in Greece. The flag, shown at
	  
	  http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7310654.stm appears to show 
	  the Olympic rings in white on black, with the bottom two rings formed out 
	  of a pair of handcuffs.
James Dignan, 24 March 2008
      The flag was designed by "Reporters sans frontières" (RSF), an association 
	  founded by Robert Ménard in 1985, aiming at the defense of the freedom of 
	  press. Every year in January, RSF publishes an account of the freedom of 
	  press in the world, listing the reporters killed or jailed the least year 
	  and the censored medias. RSF was awarded in 2005 the Sakharov Prize by the 
	  European Parliament.
The handcuff flag is part of the RSF campaign 
	  for the freedom of press in China. The flag can be seen in full on the RSF 
	  website. The white text below "Beijing 2008" is "Reporters Without 
	  Borders", the English translation of the association's name:
	  
	  http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=24684 
The handcuff 
	  flag was shown for the first time on 15 October 2007 in front of the 
	  Olympic Museum in Lausanne (Switzerland), to "celebrate" the inauguration 
	  of the 17th Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in Beijing:
	  
	  http://www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=23986. 
The first 
	  version of the flag was in French ("Pékin 2008" / "Reporters sans 
	  frontières"), as shown on the photography of the event by Nicholas 
	  Ratzenboek (AFP)
	  
	  http://www.radio-canada.ca/nouvelles/International/2007/10/16/007-RSF-classement.shtml?ref=rss
	  
Ivan Sache, 19 April 2009
      
        ![[handcuffs protest flag]](../images/o/oly@cuff.jpg) image located by Terence 
	  Martin, 10 February 2009
 image located by Terence 
	  Martin, 10 February 2009
      Today's Wall Street Journal covered protests against the amount of money 
	  being spent on the Vancouver Winter Olympics in 2010, claiming the money 
	  would be better spent on social programs aimed at poverty. The flag turns 
	  each ring on the Olympic flag into a handcuff:
	  
	  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123423535627866521.html 
Terence 
	  Martin, 10 February 2009
From
  
  http://www.phayul.com/news/article.aspx?id=7556&t=1&c=1: 
"Police, 
  protesting Tibetans clash AP[Monday, August 30, 2004 18:35]
By ELENA 
  BECATOROS
ATHENS, Greece August 29 - Tibetan protesters and police briefly 
  scuffled at the main Olympic stadium complex Sunday, just hours before 
  organizers of the 2008 Beijing Games were to receive the Olympic flag at the 
  closing ceremony. After passing through a security checkpoint, six activists 
  from the International Tibet Support Network unfurled a black flag with five 
  bullet holes replacing the Olympic rings, and began marching toward the main 
  stadium. They were stopped by about two dozen police and security guards who 
  seized the flag in a brief scuffle. Olympic rules forbid political banners in 
  venues...
"We feel that this is the flag that Beijing truly deserves," 
  spokesman Tenzin Sewo said."
It's accompanied of a photograph showing 
  what may be a flag, with a photograph of five bullet holes in a three over two 
  pattern with a black stripe of approximately 1/6th of the width along the top 
  and bottom, bit with white lettering. The top text says: "China plays games 
  with human rights"; the bottom one says: "www.2008-FreeTibet.org". The 
  photograph of the flag has the caption:
"Activists from the International 
  Tibet Support Network display a banner with five bullet holes replacing the 
  Olympic rings in the sport complex of the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens on 
  Sunday, Aug. 29, 2004. In the evening the organizers of the 2008 Beijing Games 
  will receive the Olympic flag. (Ap Photo/Petros Giannakouris)"
Peter 
  Hans van den Muijzenberg, 3 April 2008
At
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080318.wsptoly18/BNStory/International:
The caption of the photograph says:
"A Tibetan demonstrator is seen 
near a flag representing the Beijing Olympics during a protest in Siliguri on 
Tuesday. (Diptendu Dutta/AFP/Getty Images)"
And what we see of that 
"flag" in the background is a near-blood red field with what would be the chain 
of rings in the order blue, orange, black, brown and red, with at least the 
orange and red being outlined in grey. However, the black ring is broken at the 
top and bottom and already slightly pulled apart, with one small bit exactly at 
the top remaining in place, put two other bits falling down through what would 
normally be the heart of the black ring. The reason that the middle ring is 
broken might be that there are two hands pulling the rings apart, as something 
in grey seems to be holding the places where the pairs of outer rings cross at 
the bottom, but this is where the photograph is cut. What it is we don't see, 
and whether it's really a flag, I don't know, and I can't easily find a wider 
image. 
Peter Hans van den Muijzenberg, 4 April 2008
![[The Olympic flag]](../images/o/oly@bov!.gif) image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 6 December 2023
 
image by António Martins-Tuválkin, 6 December 2023
In late 2008 was held in Saint Juste le Martel (dep. Haute-Vienne, in
France) the 27th International Show of Caricature, Cartoon and Humor
(_27.? Salon international de la Caricature, du Dessin de presse et
d’humour_) and its promotional poster includes a cow — which, as the
show’s mascot, is an often sight. This one cow is shown as the winner,
sitting on a number one podium, of some unspecified athletic event:
https://web.archive.org/web/20180629131033/http://www.imultimedia.pt/museuvirtpress/eventuais/daumier/saint_just/logo.jpg
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Saint-Just_2008.JPG
On the background of the illustration a modified Olympic flag is shown,
with the usual circular rings reshaped to show horns, like a stylized
cow head profile. Although this flag is shown with its hoist side at the
veiwer’s left hand, the whole design is reversed, with the red and green
rings at the hoist and the blue and yellow ones at the fly.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 6 December 2023