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Chinese students cheer Malaysian torch relay

  • Story Highlights
  • Chinese students outnumber pro-Tibet students during latest Olympic torch relay
  • Heavy security in place on 10-mile (16 km) route through Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
  • Woman wearing pro-Tibet shirt overwhelmed by Chinese supporters
  • Olympic torch relay now heads to Jakarta, Indonesia for Tuesday race
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KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (CNN) -- Hundreds of flag-waving Chinese students gathered at the starting and ending points of the Olympic torch relay in Kuala Lumpur Monday, far outnumbering the handful of people who carried pro-Tibet signs.

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Malaysia Olympic Council President Imran Jaafar kicks off the Malaysian leg of the torch relay.

Heavy security was in place to protect the 80 runners carrying the Olympic torch along a 10-mile (16 km) route through the Malaysian capital, ending at the Petronas Twin Towers.

About 500 Chinese students attended the relay, carrying pro-China signs and heckling the few people taking a pro-Tibet stand.

The Chinese students wore identical shirts with the slogan "One Dream, One Nation," and many of them had Chinese flags painted on their faces, according to witnesses.

An Olympics organizer said the Chinese Embassy arranged for the students to be there. Several of the students told CNN that the Chinese government provided their transportation to the event and gave them the flags and shirts.

Witnesses said the Chinese students overwhelmed a woman wearing a "Free Tibet" shirt and holding a pro-Tibet sign, hitting her with small Chinese flags before she was carried away unhurt by a photographer.

"As soon as spectators saw what she was doing, they immediately mobbed her, hitting her with flags," said Brad Kesler, an American tourist who was there to watch the start of the relay.

Kesler said the woman was holding the sign and not yelling.

At least two other people carrying pro-Tibet signs were carried away by police. It was not clear if they were detained because of a disruption or if they were removed for their own safety.

About 1,500 people attended the relay's start in Independence Square, according to witness estimates. Few of them appeared to be local residents -- a member of the Malaysian Olympics council explained it was a work day. Video Watch the torch arrive in Malaysia »

Malaysian actress Marina Mahathir, one of the 80 torchbearers, said she was "very excited and very proud to be carrying the torch." She said she did not expect any of the violence that disrupted the relay in several other cities.

Earlier torch relay stops in London, England; Paris, France; and San Francisco, California attracted tens of thousands of demonstrators. Some protesters in those cities tried to disrupt the relay, and police made dozens of arrests.

The flame will arrive in Jakarta, Indonesia late Monday for a torch relay there on Tuesday. The route will be shortened to just over 4 miles (7 km) and be confined to the city's main sports stadium, with only invited guests and journalists allowed inside, the Indonesian Sports Committee said.

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While anti-Tibet protests in Indonesia have not been large, security will be tight. The Indonesian Society for a Free Tibet said several hundred people will protest outside the stadium during Tuesday's relay.

"We're not against the Olympics, per se, because we're not against sports, but we are against what China's doing to all the other minorities, not just Tibet," Indonesian Society for a Free Tibet spokesman Enrico Soekarno said. E-mail to a friend E-mail to a friend

CNN's Dan Rivers and Kathy Quiano contributed to this report

Copyright 2008 CNN. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Associated Press contributed to this report.

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