China rejects push to strip Beijing of Winter Olympics over human rights concerns

Beijing has rejected calls for China to be banned from hosting the 2022 Winter Olympics over its human rights record, dismissing the scrutiny as against the spirit of the Games.

Zhangjiakou City, where the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games is set to take place.

Zhangjiakou City, where the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games is set to take place. Source: ICHPL Imaginechina

Pressure is mounting against Beijing’s hosting of the 2022 Winter Olympics as politicians around the world and human rights groups raise concerns over China’s human rights record.

Critics argue the International Olympic Committee (IOC) should reconsider awarding China the Games because of the prevailing concerns in Xinjiang and Hong Kong and ongoing restrictions on press freedom.

But Beijing has rejected the growing calls - which include scrutiny from British, Australian, European MPs and human rights groups - as against the spirit of the Games.

Australian politicians weighing into the debate have resisted backing calls for a boycott, but stressed ongoing scrutiny must be applied to China's human rights record.
Fireworks light up behind the Olympic Flame during the Opening Ceremony of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.
Fireworks light up behind the Olympic Flame during the Opening Ceremony of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. Source: DPA

Global push to strip Beijing of Winter Olympics

The push for a boycott of the Games first came from a coalition of 160 human rights groups in a letter to the IOC on 8 September calling for the body to reverse their decision to award the Winter Olympics to Beijing.

Their list of grievances included the mass internment of Uighurs, China's crackdown on the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong and new evidence of hundreds of thousands of Tibetans being made to work in forced labour camps.
The Australia Tibet Council and East Turkistan Australian Association are signatories to the letter representing ethnic monitories claiming persecution at the hands of Chinese authorities.

Australia Tibet Council representative Kyinzom Dhongdue said the ongoing “human rights abuses” committed by China meant they were not fit to host the Olympics.

“This is the time for Australia and the international community to unite, to come together and hold China accountable for their atrocious human rights abuse,” she told SBS News.

“China is not fit to host the international Olympic Games. The human rights situation ... has gone from bad to worse."

China dismisses human rights abuses tarnishing Winter Olympics

The founder of a global Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, founded in June as part of an effort to counter its influence, has now also backed calls for the IOC's decision to be reviewed.

Former Tory leader, Sir Iain Duncan Smith, has asked the International Olympic Committee to reconsider Beijing's hosting of the 2022 Winter Olympics.
Sir Iain Duncan Smith.
Sir Iain Duncan Smith. Source: Press Association
The global parliamentary alliance includes Australian politicians among its 160 members. Canada, the US, the UK, Japan and New Zealand are also among the members.

But spokesperson for China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs Wang Wenbin has dismissed concerns over the country's human rights record.

“Some organisations have linked the so-called human rights issues with the Beijing Winter Olympics in an attempt to put pressure on the Chinese side, which is a mistake to politicise the sports movement,” Mr Wenbin said.

“This kind of behaviour violates the spirit of the Olympic Charter and interferes with and destroys the development of international human rights.”
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin. Source: EPA

Australian politicians divided on calls for action

Nurmuhammad Majid, president of East Turkistan Australian Association, has called on the international community to back the boycott.

He said more international pressure needs to be applied to the the mass detention of Uighurs in China’s Xinjiang region.

"The incarceration of the Uyghur Muslims is illegal, unethical and inhumane,” he told SBS News.

“If you are allowing the Chinese government to continue with the Olympic Games, that gives China another incentive to strengthen their capacity to resist the international criticism.”

But Liberal MP and former diplomat Dave Sharma has warned any such move could cause more harm than good, likely inflaming tensions with Beijing and hardening nationalist views in China.

“It would just lead to a more hostile relationship between China and the West and I don't think that would be a positive thing,” he told SBS News.

“I don't think it would lead to an improvement in the internal human rights situation in China, I don't think it would lead to more political openness and transparency.”
Liberal MP Dave Sharma.
Liberal MP Dave Sharma. Source: AAP
Meanwhile, independent MP Zali Steggall, a bronze medal winner in alpine skiing at the 1998 Winter Games, said the matter was for the IOC to consider, but has called for continued monitoring of the “unfolding situation”.

“I have been concerned about the allegations of serious human rights abuses and the recent shutting down of free speech in China,” she told SBS News.

Labor Senator Kimberley Kitching, a co-chair of the global parliamentary alliance, also said further consideration was required before a decision could be made to ban Beijing from hosting the Games.

“One does need to have a very light hand in dealing with the connection between politics and sport,” she told SBS News.

The IOC in a statement said awarding the Games did not amount to agreeing with the human rights standards in a country.

"Awarding the Olympic Games to a National Olympic Committee does not mean that the IOC agrees with the political structure, social circumstances or human rights standards in its country."


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5 min read
Published 23 September 2020 7:34pm
Updated 23 September 2020 7:56pm
By Tom Stayner


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