China looks to Winter Olympics as chance for rare soft power win amid
COVID-19, rights concerns
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[February 03, 2021]
By Gabriel Crossley
BEIJING (Reuters) - The Winter
Olympics, due to begin in one year, offer China a chance to show off
its epidemic controls, dazzle with spectacle and seize a publicity
win on the world stage - but human rights concerns and COVID-19
uncertainty cast a cloud over the games.
Organisers promise a "joyful rendezvous upon pure ice and snow" that
will kick off on Feb. 4, 2022. Artificial powder will likely be
needed to help cover the slopes carved out on the brown, arid
mountains to Beijing's northwest.
"China will want the Olympics to set a new narrative that is about
the country opening up to the world again," said Rana Mitter, who
teaches Chinese history and politics at Oxford University.
Under President Xi Jinping, China has tightened control over civil
society and clamped down on dissent, even as its economy recovers
robustly from COVID-19 and Beijing asserts itself on the global
stage. Rights groups and some Western politicians have condemned
China's hosting of the games, citing Beijing's policies in Hong Kong
and Xinjiang.
The COVID-19 pandemic, which has delayed the much larger 2020 Tokyo
Summer Olympics, is unlikely to be fully controlled globally by next
February, health experts say.
But China has smothered most outbreaks within its borders, keeping
new case numbers low.
Borders are currently closed to most foreigners, and it is not yet
clear how Beijing will manage visiting athletes and delegations. The
Olympics organising committee did not immediately respond to a
request for comment.
Wang Huiyao, president of the Center for China and Globalization, a
Beijing think-tank, said demonstrating control over the virus while
providing global entertainment would help other countries see past
ideological differences and burnish China's image.
"People will see it doesn't matter. Black cat, white cat, as long as
it catches mice," said Wang, using a phrase attributed to Deng
Xiaoping, the former Chinese leader who guided China's
transformation into an economic powerhouse.
Beijing's first Olympics, the 2008 Summer Games, demonstrated
China's ability to put on a show on an unprecedented scale. Some
facilities built for 2008, including the Bird's Nest Stadium, will
be re-used.
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A child plays football
near a statue of Olympic rings at the Olympic Forest Park in
Beijing, China January 29, 2021. Picture taken January 29, 2021.
REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
Others have been newly built near the city of Zhangjiakou in Hebei
province, connected to Beijing by high speed rail.
Shortly after President Xi toured facilities in January, officials
vowed they would "not let down the great trust and expectations of
the Party and the people".
SOURING OLYMPIC SPIRIT
British Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said in October he had not
ruled out Britain boycotting the Olympics due to China's treatment
of the Uighurs, a Muslim minority in its western Xinjiang region.
A group of more than 180 rights groups issued an open letter on
Wednesday calling on countries to boycott the games to avoid an
"endorsement" of China, which the letter called "one of the world's
worst human rights violators".
China has denied accusations of persecution and forced labour in
Xinjiang, and defended its security crackdown in Hong Kong as
necessary.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) called for the International Olympics
Committee (IOC) to explain its efforts to manage human rights risks
by February, when the one-year countdown begins.
Sophie Richardson, China director for HRW, said it had yet to
receive a formal response. China's response to activism by athletes
is one of her many concerns about the games, she said.
"What's going to happen when athletes want to use WeChat and offer
comments that are critical of the Chinese government?" she said,
referring to the chat app, ubiquitous in China, which is subject to
the country's online censors.
The IOC told Reuters it has raised human rights issues with China's
government. Beijing gave "assurances" on rights, media freedom and
internet restrictions, according to an IOC evaluation document.
In a recent interview with China's official Xinhua news agency, IOC
President Thomas Bach called Beijing's preparations for the games
"almost a miracle."
(Reporting by Gabriel Crossley; Editing by Michael Perry)
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