
My friend Chandni pointed this out to me in The New York Times today. The Olympic torch is passing through New Delhi tomorrow, and the Indian government is apparently so afraid of violent protests that it might not allow the adults to attend the relay. Children, however, are another matter:
India Puts Children on the Front Line
As the Olympic torch circumscribes the globe causing flare ups in its wake, the biggest protest may be tomorrow in New Delhi. India is home to the Dalai Lama and was the first safe harbor for Tibetan refugees when China annexed their homeland in 1950. So it’s no small wonder that the Indian government is rolling out reams of barbed wire to protect the Chinese embassy ahead of the torch’s arrival. The New York Times reports that over 10,000 police officers ands members of India’s security forces will safeguard the torch’s route through the capital. Police even pre-emptively arrested dozens of Tibetan protesters earlier this week.
So in this state of heightened security, who is the government going to allow to cheer on the torch bearers as they pass through the city? According to The New York Times, ordinary civilians may be banned from attending the event with the exception, of course, of “selected schoolchildren.”


Little did I know that this story would garner me the most comments so far out of anything I had written at 




Another PSA I wrote for