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New geopolitical fears surround 2022 Beijing Olympics

02-16-2022 at 10:30:45 PM

New geopolitical fears surround 2022 Beijing Olympics

New geopolitical fears surround 2022 Beijing Olympics



Global fears of China's authoritarian rise are overshadowing the upcoming 2022 Winter Olympic Games in Beijing and sparking calls for a boycott.To get more news about beijing 2022 olympic winter games, you can visit shine news official website.

Why it matters: By openly flouting human rights norms while claiming leadership of the international system, China is cracking the foundation upon which global traditions such as the Olympics are based.

Democratic governments worry that allowing Beijing to host the Olympics without protest would further entrench China's authoritarianism domestically and abroad.
The U.S. and its partners are also concerned about the rise of China as a rival amid a growing sense of democratic vulnerability, imbuing the 2022 Games with a new undercurrent of geopolitical fear.
Driving the news: A coalition of 180 rights groups have called for a traditional boycott of the Beijing 2022 Olympics, citing human rights abuses against ethnic minorities in China.

But the White House said on Feb. 3 that the Biden administration currently does not have any plans to boycott the games or support moving them to another country.
The Beijing 2008 Summer Games were China's first Olympics, and many Chinese people both at home and around the world felt an immense sense of pride and patriotism. That enthusiasm infused the games with an unforgettable sense of joy and hope.

The entire country mobilized for the occasion, putting on stunning opening ceremonies and sparing no expense in the construction of new facilities.
Western democracies hoped the Olympics would mark a new era of democratic reform for China. In the short run, it seemed to work. China opened its doors to the world in the months leading up to the games, allowing journalists unusually easy access.
Yes, but: Human rights advocates criticized China in 2008, citing China's repression in Tibet and its support of Sudan amid the genocide in Darfur.

During the torch relay before the games began, pro-Tibet activists organized protests at more than a dozen cities around the world, while the Chinese quietly helped organize counter-protests.
In a January 2008 New York Times column titled "China's genocide Olympics," Nicholas Kristof wrote that "in exchange for access to Sudanese oil, Beijing is financing, diplomatically protecting and supplying the arms for the first genocide of the 21st century."
Now China is actually committing a genocide, not just abetting one. In January, the U.S. State Department determined the Chinese Communist Party's ongoing policies of mass internment and forced assimilation of ethnic Uyghurs in Xinjiang amounts to genocide.

But unlike other regimes that have committed genocide in recent decades, including Myanmar and Rwanda, China is the world's second most powerful country and is on track to overtake the U.S. economy within a decade.
Beijing's leaders use that heft to cow countries into silence, levying heavy costs on governments and organizations that are determined to protest against China, and manufacturing the appearance of global consent for its policies.
Numerous countries have boycotted past Olympics to protest against the host country, but there's also precedent for the IOC taking action, itself. It banned South Africa from 1964 to 1988 over its apartheid policies.

Poetry is finer and more philosophical than history; for poetry expresses the universal, and history only the particular.

Aristotle (384 BC-322 BC) Greek philosopher.