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Mia Farrow in Hong Kong as city prepares for Olympic torch
Hong Kong Olympics 5924888
Internationally famed actress and activist Mia Farrow speaks during an exclusive interview with The Associated Press upon her arrival to Hong Kong, Thursday, May 1, 2008. Farrow is expected to speak to international media at the Hong Kong Foreign Correspondents Club on human rights issues in Darfur Friday, May 2, coinciding with Hong Kong's leg of the Olympic torch relay. Farrow said she hoped to light a symbolic torch honoring the victims of fighting in Darfur, but away from the Olympic torch relay. - photo by Associated Press
    HONG KONG — On the eve of Friday’s Olympic torch relay through Hong Kong, officials allowed actress Mia Farrow into the Chinese territory so she could bash China’s cozy ties with Sudan, although they had earlier kicked out pro-Tibet activists.
    It’s all part of Hong Kong’s delicate balancing act — pleasing political masters in Beijing, while trying to be a free society and a freewheeling global financial capital.
    The relay through canyons of skyscrapers is a big challenge for Hong Kong’s leaders and police. The Olympic flame is finally back on Chinese soil, and Beijing doesn’t want a repeat of the protests and chaos that dogged it during a 20-nation overseas tour.
    Residents were encouraged to wear red to show their support for the flame, and about 3,000 police will be on hand.
    But Hong Kong is a place with civil liberties unrivaled in the rest of China. One university student has said she would unfurl a Tibetan flag, and a maverick lawmaker was expected to organize a human rights protest.
    Hong Kong was a British colony until the city was handed back to China in 1997. Although Beijing makes all the big political decisions, Hong Kong was promised a wide degree of autonomy under a formula called ‘‘one country, two systems.’’
    The media are allowed to criticize the leaders, massive street protests have been held demanding greater democracy, and English is still the official language in the courts, where judges wear British-style wigs.
    But for special events such as the Olympic torch relay, Hong Kong leans more toward the ‘‘one country’’ part of the formula than the ‘‘two systems’’ part. In the past week, authorities used a blacklist to stop seven pro-Tibet and human rights activists at the airport. After questioning, they were deported.
    It’s a tactic the authorities have used before for other events, especially those involving high-ranking Chinese leaders. They decline to explain the deportations, saying it’s a private matter.
    Many thought that Farrow might be turned away at the airport when she arrived to give a speech critical of China’s ties with Sudan. After reaching the immigration desk to get her passport stamped, officials escorted her away to discuss her plans.
    ‘‘They wanted some reassurance that we were not here to disrupt the torch relay, which of course we are not,’’ Farrow told reporters.
    In a later interview with The Associated Press, Farrow said immigration officials treated her politely and didn’t search her luggage. But she said they gave her a statement warning her not to disrupt law and order.
    Farrow was scheduled to speak about Sudan at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club on Friday. She also planned to light a symbolic torch honoring the victims of fighting in Darfur, a region in Sudan where about 200,000 people have died and 2.5 million have been forced from their homes amid four years of fighting between local rebels and government-allied militias.
    China has been one of Sudan’s biggest trading partners, buying oil from the African nation and selling it weapons. Farrow has joined activists in demanding Beijing use its influence to pressure Sudan to stop the violence.
    She told the AP she thinks Darfur is an easier issue to lobby China on than Tibet.
    ‘‘For China, Darfur is what we call the low-hanging fruit. It’s easy picking. For the Tibetans, it’s more difficult, given China’s view of Tibet and the many years that China has held this view,’’ she said, adding that she sympathizes with the Tibetan cause.
    Beijing insists that Tibet is historically part of China, but many Tibetans argue the region was virtually independent for centuries.
    A separate flame to the one that made its way around the world and reached Hong Kong on Wednesday is being taken up Mount Everest. Chinese officials are being guarded about the climb, and did not offer a report on its progress Thursday.
    China’s recent crackdown on Tibet inspired several of the torch relay protests in major cities such as Paris, London and San Francisco. Many Chinese were still upset about an incident in Paris in which a pro-Tibet protester tried to grab the torch from a wheelchair-bound Chinese athlete.
    Much of the anger has been directed at French retailer Carrefour. Tempers flared again Thursday when small groups of people protested at Carrefour stores in Beijing and other cities. No violence was reported and police dispersed the gatherings.
    One Beijing protester said, ‘‘We want to let all foreigners know that China is very angry today. We have to let Chinese people in China know that we are united.’’

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