US Diplomatic Boycott Of Olympics Pushes Back At Beijingâs Efforts To Control Sports Stars
Qatar Tribune
Trudy Rubin In 1936, human rights advocates pushed for a boycott of the âNazi Olympics,â two years after Adolf Hitler seized power and began persecuting Je...
Trudy RubinIn 1936, human rights advocates pushed for a boycott of the âNazi Olympics,â two years after Adolf Hitler seized power and began persecuting Jews.Some critics claimed the move was hypocritical given the ongoing discrimination against black people in the United States. In the end, however, the games went on, with black U.S. track star Jesse Owens winning four gold medals. Thus, the 1936 games dealt a blow to Nazi claims of âAryanâ racial supremacy.Fast-forward to the upcoming 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. The White House has announced a diplomatic boycott of the games due to massive Chinese human rights violations.This means no U.S. officials will attend but athletes will compete. Some critics dismiss this as a meaningless snub that will only irritate China, while others demand a full U.S. boycott, including athletes. I think the Biden team made exactly the right call.A full boycott of the Olympics would not have been fair to the athletes who have trained for years for this moment. Rather than change Chinese behavior, it would probably have led to a tit-for-tat Chinese boycott of future games in the United States.Yet, there was no way these Olympics could have been treated as normal. Chinaâs human rights repression not only violates Olympic principles but is now trying to control the free speech of athletes not only in China but all over the globe.âWe have to start from the premise that Beijing should never have gotten the games to begin with, if we had known what we know now,â says Michael Abramowitz, the head of Freedom House, which tracks the global status of human rights and democracies.Indeed, since the International Olympic Committee awarded Beijing the games, the world has learned about the massive Chinese government repression of hundreds of thousands of Muslim Uyghurs in Xinjiang, who have been sent to âre-educationâ camps. While not Hitlerian in death toll, this certainly smacks of cultural genocide and hideous repression.Even beyond the Uyghur horrors, and Chinaâs crushing of Hong Kong democracy, there is a more immediate sports issue that makes it impossible not to protest these games in some form. That issue can be described in a hashtag: -WhereisPengShuai?It has been five weeks since the Chinese tennis star disappeared â following her social media post that she had been sexually assaulted by a former top communist official. The world has still not seen her in person, except in two obviously staged video calls in the company of party minders. Her social media posts have been scrubbed and her whereabouts are still unknown.If China can simply âdisappearâ a sports star who angers party leaders â as it has disappeared so many others who have challenged the party â how can the worldâs most prestigious sports event ignore this crime?IOC President Thomas Bach abased himself by claiming, after watching the videos: âWe could not feel her being under pressure.â Bach claimed the IOC couldnât take âpolitical sides.â Apparently, taking a stand for athletesâ freedom of expression was too dangerous for the head of the IOC.Pengâs case reminds us of how Western athletes, celebrities, sports leagues and corporate sponsors have kept silent about Chinese human rights violations, lest they lose out on profits. Who can forget the National Basketball Leagueâs apology after a Houston Rockets official, Daryl Morey, tweeted support for Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters?Chinaâs streaming giant Tencent dropped broadcasts of Rockets games in the lucrative Chinese market â until Morey left to become president of operations of the Sixers, whereupon Tencent began blacklisting Sixers games.And then there is the case of the Boston Celticsâ center Enes Kanter, who has criticized Chinaâs repression in Tibet. He wrote an essay on Nov. 20 in the Wall Street Journal calling for the Winter Games to be moved from Beijing âfor Peng Shuaiâs sake.â Celtics games were added to Chinaâs streaming blacklist after Kanterâs critiques.But Chinaâs repression of Peng Shuai, as the Olympics near, may have jolted the sports world in a way that may make a difference. Besides Kanterâs courage, a stream of sports stars including tennis greats Naomi Osaka and Serena Williams have demanded her freedom.The Womenâs Tennis Association canceled lucrative tournaments in China until there is proof of Pengâs safety and an investigation of her charges.And international pressure is mounting for corporate sponsors of the Winter Games to hold China publicly accountable â for gross human rights abuses and the fate of Peng Shuai.So the US-led diplomatic boycott â which so far is joined by Canada, Britain and Australia â makes a global statement that Chinese repression not only violates Olympic ideals but threatens athletes worldwide. If a Chinese tennis star â or an American basketball player â cannot speak her or his mind without being punished by China, this shines a spotlight on Beijingâs demeaning of the sports world.The growing diplomatic boycott of the Olympics signals that the world is finally on guard.(Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial board member for The Philadelphia Inquirer.)