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Author Topic: Reject Beijing’s bid to host the 2022 Winter Olympics  (Read 1798 times)
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July 25, 2015, 06:33:37 PM
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Reject Beijing’s bid to host the 2022 Winter Olympics
    
    Dear International Olympic Committee Members:
    
    We urge you to reject Beijing’s bid for the 2022 Winter Olympics as China is now facing a human rights crisis with a scale of violations that is unprecedented since 2008.
    
    As we write this letter, the Chinese government is carrying out an unparalleled attack on civil society. More than 250 Chinese human-rights lawyers, legal assistants, activists and their family members have been arrested, interrogated, put under house arrest and made to disappear since July 9. The youngest is 16 and the oldest 81.
    
    Beijing has been using the Olympic Games to promote the Chinese Communist Party. If the International Olympic Committee awards Beijing the 2022 Winter Olympics, a great event intended to promote solidarity, brotherhood and human development will once again serve a corrupt dictatorship. It will endorse a government that blatantly violates human rights. Awarding Beijing the Olympics is a contradiction of the Olympics’ goal of “promoting a peaceful society concerned with the preservation of human dignity.”
    
    The 2008 Summer Olympics made a mockery of the fine principles that the Olympics stands for, and brought more humiliation than dignity and more sadness than joy to the people in China.
    
    In the name of the Olympics, Beijing forcibly relocated 1.5 million residents and evicted thousands of households. Hundreds of petitioners—as well as handicapped people—were detained in secret detention centers as part of the government’s effort to “clean up” the capital for the games. To put forth a good face for the Olympics, Beijing covered up a nationwide powdered milk scandal, which seriously affected the health of some 360,000 babies in China by 2008. The government also banned record-holding athlete Fang Zheng from the Paralympics because his legs were crushed by a tank in the 1989 Tiananmen Massacre.
    
    To win the 2008 Olympics, China promised to allow space for Chinese citizens to protest during the games. Spaces were allocated, but those that applied for permission to hold protests were actually arrested, making a mockery of China’s promises to the IOC. We expect similar abuses to take place should you award China the 2022 Winter Olympics.
    
    We feel utterly ashamed of such a notorious human rights record, which not only contradicts Beijing’s own promises, but also severely tarnishes the reputation and spirit of the Olympic Games.
    
    Beijing promised to improve press freedom in order to win the 2008 Olympics. Instead, the Chinese media have experienced even more censorship and crackdowns. China has been denying work visas to a number of foreign journalists who cover “sensitive” issues. The country is the world’s largest jailer of journalists, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
    
    Allowing Beijing to host the 2022 Winter Olympics would send the world a message that China’s human rights abuses are being endorsed by the IOC, making the 2022 Games look strikingly similar to the 1936 Berlin Olympics and the 1980 Moscow Olympics.
    
    We believe that the pure Olympic dream should never serve political oppression by a host government. We dream that one day the sacred Olympic flame will cast a light on a free China. For now, under this government, any more Olympic games would go down in history as the Shame Games, and make the IOC an accomplice in the abuse of human rights in the name of the Olympics.


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July 25, 2015, 06:34:16 PM
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致国际奥委会公开信:反对北京申办2022年冬奥会
(博讯北京时间2015年7月25日 首发 - 支持此文作者/记者)
     
    博讯报道,7月24日,以中国人为主的一群人发出致国际奥委会的公开信,并征集全球联署,反对北京申办2022年冬奥会。
     
   公开信认为,中国正在发生广泛和严重的人权迫害,包括最近发生的超过250名维权律师及人权卫士被打压事件。公开信说,“如果国际社会同意北京申办2022年冬奥会,那么一场基于团结、兄弟情谊和人类发展的盛事将再次服务于一个腐败的独裁政权,支持一个无耻侵犯人权的政府,这将和奥林匹克宪章中‘增进社会和平、促进人类尊严’的宗旨矛盾。”
   
    公开信称,中国政府并未兑现主办2008年夏季奥运会关于改善人权的承诺,人权状况更加恶化。公开信认为,“如果(国际奥委会)赞同北京举办2022年冬奥会,将给世界传达这样一个信息:国际奥委会支持中国政府侵犯人权。”
   
    7月31日,国际奥委会将在马来西亚吉隆坡举行全体会议,投票产生2022年冬奥会举办城市。
   
    以下为公开信全文:
   
    致国际奥委会公开信:反对北京申办2022年冬奥会
   
    尊敬的国际奥委会委员:
   
    我们敦促您投票反对北京申办2022年冬奥会,因为2008年以来,中国人权史无前例的恶化。
   
    我们在写这封信的时候,中国政府正对公民社会展开一场全面进攻。自从7月9日,超过250名维权律师、法律助理、活动人士和他们的家庭成员被逮捕、审问、软禁和或失踪,年龄最小的只有16岁,最年长的81岁。
   
    北京已将奥运会用于宣传中国共产党。如果国际社会同意北京申办2022年冬奥会,那么一场基于团结、兄弟情谊和人类发展的盛事将再次服务于一个腐败的独裁政权,支持一个无耻侵犯人权的政府,这将和奥林匹克宪章中“增进社会和平、促进人类尊严”的宗旨矛盾。
   
    2008年夏季奥运会对奥林匹克原则是一次嘲讽,给中国民众带来的羞辱多过尊严、悲伤多过喜悦。
   
    以奥运之名,北京强拆了150万居民的住宅,并将几千个”钉子户“赶出家门。在为奥运”清理“首都的行动中,数百上访者和残疾人被拘留在秘密地点。为了办奥运的面子,北京掩盖了全国性毒奶粉丑闻——而毒奶粉到2008年为止导致36万婴幼儿患病。北京禁止金牌选手方政参加残奥会,因为在”八九六四“被坦克碾断了双腿,从而成为天安门屠杀的活见证。
   
    为了获得08年夏季奥运会主办权,中国政府承诺为公民在比赛期间的抗议活动提供场地。政府的确提供了,但申请抗议的公民仍然被逮捕,这等于把政府自己对国际奥委会的承诺开了个玩笑。如果北京取得2022年冬奥会主办权,类似的滥权还会发生。
   
    我们对如此恶劣的人权纪录感到极其羞愧——它们不但和北京的承诺相矛盾,而且严重玷污了奥运的声誉,损坏了奥运精神。
   
    为了获得08年夏季奥运会主办权,中国政府承诺改善新闻自由。然而,中国媒体经历了更严厉的审查和打压。政府拒绝给一些外国记者发放工作签证,只因他们报道了“敏感”话题。据保护记者委员会记录,全世界关押记者人数最多的国家正是中国。
   
    如果赞同北京举办2022年冬奥会,将给世界传达这样一个信息:国际奥委会支持中国政府侵犯人权。这样,2022年冬奥会将与1936年柏林奥运会和1980年莫斯科奥运会极其相似。
   
    我们相信,纯洁的奥林匹克梦决不应服务于主办国政府严重的对内镇压。我们梦想着有一天,奥运圣火将照亮一个自由的中国。然而在当前、在现政府统治下,在北京再次举办奥运会将成为耻辱载入史册,也将使国际奥委会成为以奥运之名侵犯人权的帮凶。
   
    Contacts (联系人):
   
    Yi Gu (古懿), slmngy@uga.edu
   
    Rose Tang (唐路), rosetangy@gmail.com

   
    Signatures (签名):
   
    Tony Chang (张上), Australia (澳大利亚)
   
    CHEN Chuangchuang (陈闯创): USA (美国)
   
    CHEN Guangcheng (陈光诚): USA(美国)
   
    CHEN Kuide (陈奎德): USA (美国)
   
    CHEN Liqun (陈立群), USA (美国)
   
    CHENG Qiubo (成秋波): USA (美国)
   
    DU Yanlin (杜延林): China (中国)
   
    FANG Yong (方勇): USA (美国)
   
    FANG Zheng (方政): USA (美国)
   
    FENG Yun (封云): UK (英国)
   
    George GE (葛洵): USA (美国)
   
    Yi GU (古懿): USA (美国)
   
    HE Qinglian (何清涟): USA (美国)
   
    HU Jia (胡佳): China (中国)
   
    HU Yunfei (胡云飞): USA (美国).
   
    LI Juan (李隽): Australia (澳大利亚)
   
    LIAO Yiwu (廖亦武), Germany (德国)
   
    LIU Shasha (刘沙沙): Canada (加拿大)
   
    SHEN Liangqing (沈良庆): China (中国)
   
    SHI Yi (施毅): USA (美国)
   
    SU Yutong (苏雨桐): Germany (德国)
   
    Rose TANG (唐路): USA (美国)
   
    TENG Biao (腾彪): USA(美国)
   
    WANG Lihong (王荔蕻): China (中国)
   
    WU Lebao (吴乐宝): Australia(澳大利亚)
   
    WU Qiang (吴强): China (中国)
   
    WU Renhua (吴仁华): USA (美国)
   
    Wu’erkaixi (吾尔开希), Taiwan (台湾)
   
    XIA Ming (夏明): USA (美国)
   
    XIA Yeliang (夏业良): USA (美国)
   
    YAN Kefu (颜柯夫): Taiwan (台湾)
   
    YANG Jianli (杨建利), USA (美国)
   
    YANG Kuang (杨匡): Canada (加拿大)
   
    ZHOU Fengsuo (周锋锁): USA (美国)
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July 25, 2015, 06:54:48 PM
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Chinese Activists Urge IOC to Reject Beijing's 2022 Winter Olympics Bid
By Paul Eckert
2015-07-24

A group of Chinese intellectuals on Friday called on the International Olympic Committee to reject Beijing's bid to host the 2022 Winter Olympics to Beijing, arguing that China failed to keep the promises of openness and press freedom it made for the 2008 Summer Games and that conditions have only gotten worse since.

The IOC members will vote on July 31 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia to decide whether Beijing or Almaty, the capital of Kazakhstan, to host the 2022 Winter Olympics.

A widening crackdown on lawyers and human rights defenders, deepening repression in Buddhist Tibet and Muslim Xinjiang and growing intolerance to press freedom make Beijing a poor candidate, said a letter to the IOC signed by scores of prominent Chinese activists.

"We feel utterly ashamed of such a notorious human rights record, which not only contradicts Beijing’s own promises, but also severely tarnishes the reputation and spirit of the Olympic Games," ," the letter said..

"As Chinese nationals and former citizens, we urge you to reject Beijing’s bid for the 2022 Winter Olympics as China is now facing a human rights crisis with a scale of violations that is unprecedented since 2008," it said.


Among signatories are Chinese students in the U.S., Canada and Australia, China-based dissidents Hu Jia and Du Yanlin and include exiled human rights lawyer Chen Guangcheng, lawyer Teng Biao, and economists He Qinglian and Xia Yeliang. Many of the signatories have been forced to live in exile for their political views or activism.

"If the International Olympic Committee awards Beijing the 2022 Winter Olympics, a great event intended to promote solidarity, brotherhood and human development will once again serve a corrupt dictatorship. It will endorse a government that blatantly violates human rights," said the letter.

"Awarding Beijing the Olympics is a contradiction of the Olympics’ goal of “promoting a peaceful society concerned with the preservation of human dignity.”



A "mockery" of Olympic principles

To win the right to host the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China made promises of unprecedented openness and tolerance but quickly "a mockery of the fine principles that the Olympics stands for, and brought more humiliation than dignity and more sadness than joy to the people in China," the letter said.

"To win the 2008 Olympics, China promised to allow space for Chinese citizens to protest during the games. Spaces were allocated, but those that applied for permission to hold protests were actually arrested, making a mockery of China’s promises to the IOC," it said.

"We expect similar abuses to take place should you award Beijing the 2022 Winter Olympics," the authors added.

The IOC was sent a similar letter on Wednesday by a group of Tibetans, Uyghurs, Southern Mongolians and China's majority Han Chinese, who said the 2008 Beijing Games "did nothing to alleviate human rights abuses in China or enhance freedom" and that "in fact, the situation now in 2015 is far worse than when those Games were awarded in 2001."

"Until the leaders of the Chinese Communist Party are prepared to reform and recognize the inherent rights of all people, they should not be awarded the honor of another Olympics. The IOC must recognise that the Olympic spirit and the reputation of the Olympic Games will suffer further damage if the worsening human rights crisis in China is simply ignored," said the July 23 letter.

Friday's letter to the IOC echoed concerns voiced two days earlier by by The New York-based group Human Rights Watch (HRW), which warned that awarding the Olympics to authoritarian regimes encourages them to commit further rights abuses.

"There is plenty of evidence that awarding the Olympics to a country with a bad human rights record readily leads to more abuses linked to the Olympic preparations and events that will tarnish the games," Minky Worden, HRW Global Initiatives director, said in a statement on the group's website.

Since Xi Jinping assumed the presidency in March 2013, the ruling Chinese Communist Party has "unleashed an extraordinary assault on basic human rights and their defenders with a ferocity unseen in recent years," HRW said.

"It has also significantly narrowed space for the press and the Internet, further limiting opportunities for citizens to press for much-needed reforms," the statement said.

The letter to the IOC noted that "more than 250 Chinese human-rights lawyers, legal assistants, activists and their family members have been arrested, interrogated, put under house arrest or made to disappear since July 9.”

Experts say the relentless crackdown on human rights defenders portends a repressive phase not seen in China since the 25 years since People's Liberation Army troops crushed the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests.
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July 25, 2015, 07:53:40 PM
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July 26, 2015, 09:41:46 PM
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https://www.change.org/p/international-olympic-committee-to-reject-beijing-s-bid-to-host-the-2022-winter-olympics


15000 signatures to go, now 11300
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July 28, 2015, 07:31:45 PM
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Beijing 'Unfit' to Stage 2022 Olympics:  Ethnic Minority Groups
2015-07-28 



Chinese human rights lawyers Teng Biao calls in a tweet for Beijing to be denied the 2022 Winter Games.
Photo courtesy of Teng Biao's Twitter account


Ethnic minority groups are calling on the International Olympic Committee not to award the 2022 Winter Games to Beijing, saying that China’s rights record actually worsened as a result of the 2008 Summer Games hosted by Beijing.

Beijing, which will go head-to-head with Kazakhstan's capital Almaty in a July 31 vote for the right to host the Winter Games, didn’t just fail to deliver on the promises it made during the earlier bid, but brought in a new round of oppressive policies directly linked to the 2008 Games, activists told RFA.

Ethnic minority groups like Tibetans and the mostly Muslim Turkic-speaking Uyghur group were singled out in particular as Beijing sought to ensure that nobody used the Olympics as a platform to highlight human rights abuses, they said.

“China never keeps its promises to the international community, and for China to host another Olympics would boost [Chinese] nationalism,” Dilxat Raxit, spokesman for the exile group World Uyghur Congress, said in a recent interview.

“Ethnic minorities won’t see the slightest improvement in their basic living conditions, and yet they’ll have to put up with even greater political persecution,” Raxit said.

He said it would be against the Olympic spirit to give the Winter Games to China, given that it has no track record of improvement in its policies towards ethnic minorities.

“China made promises during its bid to host the 2008 Games, but the opposite happened, and the human rights situation got much worse in the aftermath,” Raxit said.

“Far from bringing the changes expected by the international community, [Beijing] brought in a raft of oppressive policies instead,” he said.

London-based Free Tibet, one of the Tibetan groups coordinating an international campaign against awarding the 2022 Winter Olympics to Beijing, has similar views.

'Minority voices'

Dorothy Hui, Hong Kong-based spokeswoman for the group, said awarding the Games to China will inevitably mean that already oppressed ethnic minority groups like Tibetans will face greater persecution, as the ruling Chinese Communist Party sends its nationwide “stability maintenance” security regime into overdrive ahead of the event.

“There was a lot of persecution [of ethnic minorities] surrounding the bid for the 2008 Summer Games, because the government was afraid that foreigners would get to hear the voices of ethnic minorities,” Hui told RFA. 

“They were afraid the foreigners would find out their true situation.”

She added: “There is likely to be yet another round of persecution [of Tibetans] linked to the current Olympic bid.”

She said widespread and serious pollution is also a major argument against sending the Winter Games to China, a country with no tradition of winter sports and not much of the right kind of snow.

“Every time China hosts the Olympics, there is a lot of economic development, and there is a huge amount of environmental degradation in China now,” Hui said, adding, “China doesn’t have the right conditions to apply to host the Olympics.”

“For a country to host the Games, it should have a strong sporting tradition, but this isn’t very strong in China at all,” she said.

A politicized Games?

China’s foreign ministry said in a statement on Tuesday that the bid is intended to promote the Olympics in the country and would inspire more than 300 million Chinese to participate in winter sports.

“While Chinese people are heartily looking forward to the holding of a successful and wonderful Winter Olympics, a few people with ulterior motives politicize the Games, which is not in keeping with the Olympic Spirit and will not be popular,” the statement said.

Last week, filmmaker and escaped Tibetan activist Golog Jigme signed a campaign letter to the IOC, urging the IOC not to award the Games to China.

Golog Jigme escaped in May 2014 after being detained for working on a documentary about the treatment of Tibetan nomads under Beijing’s rule.

"What we have seen since 2008 is that there is more repression, Tibetan intellectuals are being forcefully disappeared and the situation in Tibet is getting more urgent every day," he told the Associated Press.

Following a series of region-wide uprisings in March 2008, Tibetans have faced effective martial law, with security forces and government officials resident in monasteries and schools, and tight restrictions on their freedom of movement, even in rural areas.

The ruling Chinese Communist Party has governed Tibet since its People’s Liberation Army (PLA) occupied the Himalayan region in 1950.

Clampdown, arrests

China's government is also in the middle of a mass arrest of human rights lawyers and activists, as well as a clampdown on nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) and further restrictions on freedom of expression online, sparking objections to the Olympic bid from rights groups across the country.

The overseas-based Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD) group, which collates and translates reports from rights groups and informants inside China, said Beijing’s promises on human rights now lack any credibility.

“China’s abysmal human rights conditions … have rapidly degenerated since the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics,” the group said in an open letter to the IOC posted on its website.

“These problems are especially evident in the government’s escalating crackdown on anti-discrimination and labor rights NGOs, on human rights defenders including lawyers, and often in deadly discriminatory suppression in the ethnic Tibetan and Uighur regions,” it said.

“Beijing has no credibility in matters of keeping its promises and playing by the rules, [and] is clearly unfit to stage the Winter Olympics,” CHRD said.

The group said it had documented serious human rights violations directly resulting from preparations for the 2008 Games, citing illegal labor practices, forced evictions, tight control of the media, and the silencing of dissident voices.

'A military parade'

Beijing-based rights activist Hu Jia, who served a three-and-a-half-year jail term for "incitement to subversion" after he wrote online articles critical of Beijing's hosting of the 2008 Summer Olympics, hit out at official propaganda surrounding the bid that portrays it as an effort on behalf of the Chinese people.

“Is the Olympic Games really an Olympic movement on behalf of the people? In reality, the people who are doing the best job of politicizing the Olympics are the Communist Party themselves,” he said.

“This is more like a red terror, a military parade, and it won’t have any impact on the uptake of sporting activity by the general public,” he said.

CHRD added that police had also restricted the movements of at least 300 activists and petitioners during the 2014 Youth Summer Games in Nanjing, by placing them under house arrest, forcing them to “travel,” holding individuals in “black jails,” and subjecting many to police interrogation.

Reported by He Ping and Xin Lin for RFA’s Mandarin Service, and by Wong Si-lam by the Cantonese Service. Translated and written in English by Luisetta Mudie.
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July 30, 2015, 08:48:49 PM
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Activists Urge Committee to Reject Beijing’s Bid for 2022 Winter Olympics
    
BY: Daniel Wiser     
July 29, 2015 5:00 am

http://freebeacon.com/national-security/activists-urge-committee-to-reject-beijings-bid-for-2022-winter-olympics/

Prominent Chinese activists are urging the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to reject Beijing’s bid for the 2022 Winter Olympics amid what rights groups say is an unprecedented crackdown on dissidents.

The IOC will vote on Friday to select the host for the 2022 Winter Games. The competition has come down to two finalists: Beijing or Almaty, Kazakhstan. Beijing is regarded as the favorite due to China’s growing international clout.

However, activists say the Chinese government has not improved its record on human rights since 2008, when Beijing hosted the Summer Games. In fact, the Communist Party’s actions have appreciably worsened, they say. Hundreds of human rights lawyers and advocates have been detained or interrogated in the past few weeks, part of a suspected effort by the party to crush incipient forms of civil society that oppose the government.

A group of Chinese activists, including prominent dissidents Chen Guangcheng and Hu Jia, wrote a letter to Thomas Bach, the IOC’s president, on Friday and called on him and the committee to boycott Beijing’s candidacy.

Rewarding China with the Winter Games while it continues to repress its own people, they said, would violate the Olympic Charter’s pledge of “promoting a peaceful society concerned with the preservation of human dignity.”

“If the International Olympic Committee awards Beijing the 2022 Winter Olympics, a great event intended to promote solidarity, brotherhood and human development will once again serve a corrupt dictatorship,” the activists wrote. “It will endorse a government that blatantly violates human rights.”

During the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing, the party reportedly evicted more than 1 million people to clear space for construction and arrested dozens of activists who sought to protest the event.

Some athletes who were dissidents were banned from participating in the games. Fang Zheng, a record-holding discus thrower in China, was barred from competing in the 2008 Paralympics because a tank crushed his legs during the Tiananmen Square protests in 1989—a violent government crackdown on student demonstrators that the party has attempted to keep out of public discussion.

Liu Xiaobo, a prominent Chinese activist and Nobel Laureate, was detained just months after the conclusion of the Summer Games in 2008. He is currently serving an 11-year prison sentence on charges of “subversion” that critics say are politically motivated.

“The 2008 Summer Olympics made a mockery of the fine principles that the Olympics stands for, and brought more humiliation than dignity and more sadness than joy to the people in China,” the activists wrote in the letter.

Additionally, about 300 activists were detained or harassed during last summer’s Youth Olympic Games in Nanjing.

The United States has previously boycotted Olympics events in authoritarian countries, such as the 1980 Games in Moscow. That year’s Olympics followed the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan.

A State Department spokesperson declined to comment on the campaign to reject Beijing’s bid for the 2022 Games. A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington did not respond to a request for comment.

Activists have become increasingly concerned about an escalation in repression under President Xi Jinping, who is widely regarded as the most authoritarian Chinese leader since Mao Zedong. According to the group Chinese Human Rights Defenders (CHRD), nearly 2,000 human rights advocates have been arbitrarily detained since Xi rose to power in 2013. In the latest crackdown on lawyers, 29 are being held in secret facilities or have effectively disappeared, CHRD says.

Beijing passed a new national security law at the beginning of this month that has enabled police to curtail dissent and jail activists, critics say. There is also draft legislation for other measures regarding Internet security, counterterrorism, and foreign non-government organizations (NGOs) that could soon lead to more detentions.

The controversy surrounding Beijing’s Winter Olympics bid comes amid heightened scrutiny of international sporting events in authoritarian countries. Russia, which hosted the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi and will host the 2018 World Cup, was accused of massive corruption after the completion of construction projects for the 2014 event. Both Russia and Qatar, which is set to host the 2022 World Cup, could lose the marquee soccer events if an investigation proves that the nations bribed FIFA officials.

Beijing also might have a more climatic problem with hosting a Winter Games—a lack of mountains and snow. Chinese officials say events such as skiing would be held in more mountainous cities about 100 miles northwest of Beijing. Water sources will also be present to produce artificial snow, officials say, despite persistent water shortages in the region.

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July 31, 2015, 06:12:48 PM
 #12

Beijing Wins Bid to Host 2022 Winter Olympics in Spite of Warnings on Human Rights
2015-07-31 

Beijing on Friday won its U.S.$1.5 billion bid to host the 2022 Winter Olympics in spite of widespread warnings from the country’s human rights activists and ethnic minorities of a worsening climate for human rights and the likelihood of more abuses to come.

IOC President Thomas Bach made the announcement at a ceremony in Kuala Lumpur after the IOC voted on presentations by Beijing, which will likely rely on man-made snow for the event, and Kazakhstan's former capital, Almaty.

Beijing received 44 votes to Almaty’s 40, making it the first city to hold both a Winter and a Summer Games, the IOC said in a statement on its website shortly after the vote.

Beijing’s presentation to the IOC on Friday showed a slick time-lapse montages of busy cities, Chinese medalists winning at the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, as well as a snow-covered Forbidden City, Summer Palace and Great Wall, in an apparent bid to ward off criticism that the country has no serious snow suitable for winter sports.

Almaty’s bid, meanwhile, focused on the widespread popular enjoyment of winter sports among ordinary people, showing men, women and children checking out ski equipment and enjoying winter sports amid thick blankets of snow.

While IOC Vice President Yu Zaiqing said the bid represented “the Chinese people’s passion” for the Winter Olympics, the Chinese delegation included some of their most successful medalists from previous Olympics and World Championships, all of whom were handpicked and fast-tracked by a state-backed training regime that critics say has little to do with public involvement in sport.



'Slap in the face'

The decision comes after international rights groups, activists in China and ethnic minority groups representing Tibetans and mostly Muslim Uyghurs, made repeated appeals to the IOC not to award China the Games, citing a slew of repressive measures surrounding the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing.

“[The] awarding of the 2022 Olympics to China is a slap in the face to China’s besieged human rights activists,” Sophie Richardson, China director for the New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW), tweeted in reaction to Friday's announcement.

“In choosing China, the IOC just failed the first test of its own new human rights commitments,” Richardson told RFA in written comments by private message.

“Discrimination, labor abuses, ever expanding restrictions on the freedom of expression, China has it all,” she said.

Even before the decision was announced, there were signs that the authorities are beginning to search out those who speak out against the Games for questioning and intimidation.

Beijing-based rights activist Du Yanlin was among 40 Chinese activists who signed an open letter opposing the Winter Games, an act which in itself put him at risk of official harassment and retaliation.

“The police showed me the documents related to the petition, and asked me what it was,” Du told RFA in an interview ahead of the IOC vote. “They said that their leaders were furious when they saw it, because I’m still out on bail.”

“They said there weren’t many people in China [who dared to oppose the Games] and that I was the worst, even worse than [Beijing rights activist] Hu Jia.”

Hu, who has also spoken out against China’s hosting of the 2022 Winter Olympics, served a three-and-a-half-year jail term for "incitement to subversion" after he wrote online articles critical of Beijing's hosting of the 2008 Summer Games.

Du said he is now under police surveillance, including of his mobile phone and social media accounts.

“China’s human rights situation has got worse and worse since the [last] Olympics,” he said.

“For China to host an Olympic Games is a humiliation for the Olympic spirit.”



Bracing for arrest

HRW spokeswoman Minky Worden said in a video statement that Beijing’s winning bid comes amid “the worst crackdown on human rights in China in more than two decades.”

“Ahead of the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, HRW documented forced evictions without compensation, migrant labor abuses building stadiums like the Bird’s Nest, crushing of civil society and arrests of activists, and journalists being threatened and intimidated,” she said.

A HRW report on the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics cited a number of human rights concerns linked to the event, including the eviction of local residents without compensation, the destruction of drinking wells, and the exploitation of migrant workers.

Activists and journalists who sought to criticize or document Olympics-related abuse faced pressure, harassment, and in some cases, arrest and prosecution, it said.

Germany based journalist Su Yutong said she was “extremely disappointed, even angry” at the result.

“Everyone knows that we are in the middle of an extremely serious human rights crackdown that is unprecedented internationally,” Su said. “Hundreds of rights lawyers have been detained, called for questioning, terrorized and threatened.”

“Actually there should have been a lot of lessons learned from the 2008 Olympics … and we are naturally disappointed that the IOC can’t see that,” she said.

According to Hubei-based rights activist Hu Junxiong, the entire bid is about boosting the prestige of the ruling Chinese Communist Party.

“They are doing it for their own prestige, and they hope to achieve international recognition by doing this sort of thing,” Hu Junxiong said. “They want to be able to say that the whole world has given us the Olympics to host, and that means China is respected, and that its government is legitimate.”

Beijing said it aims to use the Games to accelerate the development of a new sport, culture and tourism area, and to encourage interest in winter sports in a region that is home to more than 300 million people in northern China.

“Thanks to an additional contribution from the IOC of approximately 880 million US dollars to support the staging of the Olympic Winter Games in 2022, Beijing is confident that it will either break even or make a profit,” the IOC statement said.

The newly published host city contract for the 2022 Winter Olympics, signed by Chinese officials shortly after the announcement, makes dozens of mentions of the word “rights,” but in the context of commercial rights such as broadcasting or intellectual property.

Back in China, Hu Junxiong said he has made mental preparation to be targeted by police as a direct result of his public opposition to the Games.

“I’m not afraid. If they want to arrest me, they'll arrest me,” he said. “I wanted to say this because I think it’s the right thing to do.”

Reported by Wen Yuqing and Wong Si-lam for RFA’s Cantonese Service, and by Yang Fan for the Mandarin Service. Translated and written in English by Luisetta Mudie.
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August 01, 2015, 03:10:59 PM
 #13




Nazi Germany Olympic Game in 1936


IOC made apology about it in 1954.
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August 01, 2015, 04:17:44 PM
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How can you say no to the whole thing: Olympic games?
China's an awful country, but it's no different than Russia, the USA, the UK or Zimbabwe. I like sports but sports is being polluted by nationalism. The Olympic games are like a world war, only without blood.

I used to be a citizen and a taxpayer. Those days are long gone.
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August 01, 2015, 04:26:19 PM
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How can you say no to the whole thing: Olympic games?
China's an awful country, but it's no different than Russia, the USA, the UK or Zimbabwe. I like sports but sports is being polluted by nationalism. The Olympic games are like a world war, only without blood.


Why IOC made apology about their decision on 1936 berlin Olympic game in 1954?

this could be the answer to your argument above.

thanks
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August 02, 2015, 01:18:19 AM
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How can you say no to the whole thing: Olympic games?
China's an awful country, but it's no different than Russia, the USA, the UK or Zimbabwe. I like sports but sports is being polluted by nationalism. The Olympic games are like a world war, only without blood.


the difference is not on country but on political system.

autocratic government usually make use of Olympic games as propaganda such as hitler's germany, USSR and Red China.
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August 02, 2015, 01:30:46 AM
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Who will host the winter games next year?

Maybe South Africa or some subsaarian country?

(not even taking politics in consideration yet)
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August 02, 2015, 06:31:04 AM
 #18

Who will host the winter games next year?

Maybe South Africa or some subsaarian country?

(not even taking politics in consideration yet)

The next winter olympics is in 2018, South Korea.

@msc_de, this is very interesting, I love the graphics. What do you want us to do? If we believe in your cause, how can we get the word out? How can we express our voice or frustration or moral dedication or all of the above?

It's SO funny that Kazakhstan was the only other final candidate and the Beijing only won by 4 votes. And it SUCKS that Kazakhstan lost out by only 4 votes, seriously. Have any of you seen pictures of the proposed ski hill? It's like a dessert mountain! There's no snow on it and there's never any snow on it, what a waste.

There is a great article about the cost of the Olympics is going to leave us with increasingly fewer candidates.

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August 02, 2015, 10:00:31 AM
 #19

Personally, I don't see any reason why Beijing should not be allowed to host the Winter Olympics. China is representative of the human race the same way the US or any other country is.
And I don't think the China-Tibet conflict should be brought into this.

Most Tibetans are Buddhists and Buddhism is arguably humanity's most accommodating religion. There are very important parallels to be drawn between the China-Tibet and human-earth clashes, the lessons learned or not learned from this conflict will shape the coming era.
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August 02, 2015, 10:07:57 AM
 #20

Who will host the winter games next year?

Maybe South Africa or some subsaarian country?

(not even taking politics in consideration yet)

The next winter olympics is in 2018, South Korea.

@msc_de, this is very interesting, I love the graphics. What do you want us to do? If we believe in your cause, how can we get the word out? How can we express our voice or frustration or moral dedication or all of the above?

It's SO funny that Kazakhstan was the only other final candidate and the Beijing only won by 4 votes. And it SUCKS that Kazakhstan lost out by only 4 votes, seriously. Have any of you seen pictures of the proposed ski hill? It's like a dessert mountain! There's no snow on it and there's never any snow on it, what a waste.

There is a great article about the cost of the Olympics is going to leave us with increasingly fewer candidates.



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