By Crispian Balmer
BEIJING (Reuters) - The Beijing Olympics ended with a blaze
of deafening fireworks on Sunday, bringing down the curtain on
a Games that dazzled the world with sporting brilliance and
showcased the might of modern day China.
The sporting extravaganza failed to quell criticism of
China's human rights record, although the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) gave the organizers the thumbs-up and said the
Games would leave a positive legacy for future generations.
"Tonight we come to the end of 16 glorious days we will
cherish forever," IOC President Jacques Rogge told the
91,000-strong crowd in the Bird's Nest stadium.
"The world learned more about China, and China learned more
about the rest of the world," he said. "These were truly
exceptional Games."
The IOC said 43 world records and 132 Olympic records were
broken in China, which spent $43 billion on the event -- three
times more than the budget for the 2012 Games in London.
Reflecting China's new-found confidence, the nation's
athletes took their gold medal tally on the final day to 51
after winning their first two Olympic boxing titles, the most
any country has bagged since the Soviet Union in Seoul in 1988.
The United States finished with 36 golds, level with their
table-topping haul in 2004, but way behind the host nation.
The U.S. haul got a boost on Sunday when the men's
millionaire basketball team beat Spain in a thrilling final.
In the last athletics race, Kenya's Sammy Wanjiru led an
African sweep of marathon medals, lifting his arms in triumph
as he sped around the Bird's Nest for the last lap.
SPORT TAKES CENTRE STAGE
China's Communist leadership no doubt breathed a collective
sigh of relief as the giant Olympic torch was extinguished.
The run-up to the Games had cast a harsh light on China,
bringing unrest in its Tibetan region to a global audience and
showing that its rulers would not brook internal dissent.
But over the past two weeks, Beijing has wowed the visiting
world with its superlative venues, army of smiling volunteers,
glitch-free transport and seamless organization.
Fears about pollution evaporated as blue skies finally
broke through the haze. Criticism of China's human rights
record took a backseat as two athletes redefined sporting
excellence.
Michael Phelps swam into the record books by winning an
astonishing eight gold medals in the translucent Water Cube. On
the track, Jamaica's Usain Bolt captivated the crowds with
three sprint gold medals, all secured in world record times.
But critics said enough jarring notes had sounded to spoil
the symphony, with China refusing any protests during the
Games, and sentencing two elderly women to a year of
re-education for pushing for the right to demonstrate.
Rogge told reporters on Sunday the IOC could not force
change on a state "or solve all the ills of the world," but
that the Games had promoted a heightened awareness of the
environment in China and left an array of venues to nurture
future champions.
The United States took a tougher line, pressing for the
immediate release of eight Americans detained for staging
protests in favor of Tibetan independence during the Games.
"We are disappointed that China has not used the occasion
of the Olympics to demonstrate greater tolerance and openness,"
the U.S. embassy said in a statement.
LONDON WAITS IN WINGS
The British have made clear they will not even try to
emulate the Beijing epic and showed on Sunday a youthful,
exuberant image of London life, complete with a double decker
bus bearing rock icon Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin and David
Beckham, the world's most famous soccer player.
Delighted after their best Olympic performance in a century
that left Britain fourth in the medals table, Britain also
celebrated the handover of the Olympic flag on Sunday with a
street party outside the gold-tipped gates of Buckingham
Palace.
The London cameo was dwarfed by the grandiose set pieces
put on by China to wrap up its show, with hundreds of
performers climbing a huge tower and acrobats in illuminated
outfits soaring into the night sky, set alight by the
fireworks.
Ordinary Chinese glowed with national pride at their
achievement in staging the Games and at their athletes'
prowess, coming in their thousands to gawp at the pharaonic
venues.
However, in some parts of the city it was impossible to
tell the Games were going on and Olympic veterans said Beijing
lacked the international party atmosphere of previous Olympics.
But there was a United Nations feel to the sport, with a
record 86 states winning medals against 74 in Athens,
including, for the first time, Afghanistan, Mauritius,
Tajikistan and Togo.
Showing the sporting extravaganza had lost none of its
luster, the Games also looked certain to become the most viewed
in their 112-year history, with audience figures up between 20
and 30 percent on 2004 levels.
Worries about doping hovered over the Games as always, with
the IOC conducting some 5,200 tests and uncovering six cheats.
Four horses in the equestrian event also tested positive
for banned substances. An IOC official said on Sunday they
still had a backlog of four days of tests to analyze.
(Editing by Jeremy Laurence)