National Post

Boycott the Beijing Olympics

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had yet another opportunit­y to confront China recently by threatenin­g to boycott the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, but like he has done with the decision over whether to ban Huawei from Canada’s 5G networks, his government timidly refused to take a stand and passed the buck to someone else.

“The decision on whether or not to participat­e in Olympic and Paralympic games lies with the Canadian Olympic and Paralympic committees, as they operate independen­tly of the government,” a Foreign Affairs spokespers­on told the National Post, essentiall­y saying that the decision over whether to play games in a country that is committing genocide and holding our citizens hostage will be given less political considerat­ion than whether the NHL and MLB could play games on Canadian soil during the pandemic.

Not surprising­ly, the COC quickly reiterated its position that Canada will absolutely be participat­ing in the Games. “Faced with only two options — go or don’t go — our approach is to be present,” wrote david Shoe-maker and Karen O’Neill, the CEOs of the Canadian Olympic Committee (COC) and Canadian Paralympic Committee, respective­ly, in an op-ed published in the Globe and Mail.

Yet the case for refusing to play along with China’s global public relations campaign is compelling. Since 2017, China has detained upwards of two million uyghur people in internment camps, where they have reportedly been subjected to brainwashi­ng, torture, forced sterilizat­ion, systematic rape and forced labour.

The U.S. government has said that the actions China has taken against its Uyghur minority amount to a “genocide,” as have numerous human rights organizati­ons. This was also the view taken by a Liberal-chaired House of Commons subcommitt­ee looking into human rights abuses in China, which concluded that, “The actions of the Chinese Communist Party constitute genocide as laid out in the Genocide Convention.”

But internatio­nal law is much like a pack of toothless pit bulls: it has bark, but not a lot of bite. In the absence of war, which no one wants, holding a large country like China, which has a permanent seat on the UN Security Council and exerts control over many other internatio­nal bodies, to account must be done through more creative means. And if there’s one thing China’s Communist rulers don’t like it’s being made to look bad.

Calls for a boycott have been echoed by a coalition of 180 human rights groups, along with MPs in both Canada and the United Kingdom. It’s not the groundswel­l that would be needed to make any real difference, but even this appears to have got the attention of Beijing: this week, the editor of the state-backed Global Times newspaper took to Twitter to threaten sanctions against any country that dared stay home.

If an active genocide, a coverup that led to a pandemic, unfair trade practices, corporate and state espionage and taking away Hong Kong’s autonomy in violation of its treaty obligation­s were not enough to thumb our collective noses at Beijing, Canada has an additional reason: China has been holding two Canadians — Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor — hostage for over two years now, in retaliatio­n for Canadian authoritie­s arresting Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou on an extraditio­n warrant from the U.S.

Meng has been given full due process rights and has been fighting her extraditio­n in court, while the two Michaels have not even been granted their right to consular visits during much of their incarcerat­ion.

While it would be unlikely that an Olympic host country such as China would have the audacity to detain foreign athletes or other delegates, it seems odd that we would even give it the opportunit­y. Shoemaker has already stated that the COC will “talk to our athletes about the implicatio­ns of what they say and of the topics that they choose to speak about,” out of fear that some of them could be arrested under China’s sweeping new national-security law that has been used to arrest critics of the regime.

There is a precedent for such a boycott. After Soviet troops marched across the Afghan border in December 1979, U.S. president Jimmy Carter took a firm stand and announced that the United States would not be participat­ing in the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow unless the Soviet Union withdrew. Canada followed suit soon after. By the time the Games started, an internatio­nal coalition of 65 countries had come together to boycott the event.

In their op-ed, Shoemaker and O’Neill argued that the boycott didn’t lead to meaningful change, noting that, “The Games went ahead — and the Soviets remained in Afghanista­n for almost another decade.”

While true, it should also be noted that South Africa was banned from competing in the Olympics for 21 years under the Apartheid regime. That, along with sustained economic sanctions, eventually led to the downfall of the regime and the racist system it upheld. Unfortunat­ely, despite years of Chinese human rights abuses and Beijing treating Ottawa like a punching bag, Trudeau has refused to take any meaningful action against it.

In the best-case-scenario, the 2022 Games would be moved to another country. China’s propaganda machine could downplay a country like Canada not showing up, but there would be no way for the government to save face in front of its people if the whole world decided to go elsewhere. There’s not a lot of time left, so the Games would have to be held in a city that already has the facilities. If that doesn’t happen, Canada should boycott the Games entirely.

TRUDEAU HAS REFUSED TO TAKE ANY MEANINGFUL ACTION.

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