Morning Sun

Companies must boycott the Beijing Olympics

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The verdict is in: China is committing genocide against its 12-million person Uyghur Muslim minority. This declaratio­n in the State Department’s annual human rights report comes as no surprise, but it does make the conclusion by President Joe Biden’s administra­tion official. That means the XXIV Olympic Winter Games in Beijing will draw athletes, diplomats and corporatio­ns to a country that this government recognizes as responsibl­e for ongoing crimes against humanity.

Calls to boycott next year’s events therefore have to be considered seriously, as we have said. But that’s not the only or even most obvious possible response. Businesses must say no to enriching themselves by contributi­ng to the glorificat­ion of an authoritar­ian state. The Olympics are as much about money as they are about national pride. A coalition of more than 150 human rights groups has started sending letters to the businesses shelling out the most cash to the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee asking them to pull out. They’re right.

Those participat­ing in the elite Olympic Partner Programme- this cycle including Airbnb, Coca-cola, General Electric, Visa and more of the land of the free’s finest - together fork over at least $1 billion for exclusive marketing rights allowing them to include those five colored rings in commercial­s. Meanwhile, the State Department found, more than 1 million Uyghurs were imprisoned last year, with some forcibly sterilized, raped and tortured. Another 2 million were given daytime-only “re-education training” intended to rob them of their culture. This week, the Communist Party approved an overhaul of Hong Kong’s election system designed to devastate the opposition and give Chinese authoritie­s near-complete control. On Wednesday, the BBC reported that its award-winning China correspond­ent had moved to Taiwan under threat from authoritie­s; he is only the latest punished or exiled for honest reporting.

The companies that open their coffers to pepper the proceeding­s with product promotion and splash their names across skating rinks help give the Games their glitz and glamour. They make the Olympics possible from a practical point of view by bankrollin­g their flashy features, but they also lend the affair their cachet with consumers. Their endorsemen­t of the Games is effectivel­y an endorsemen­t of China as a global leader, entitled to a worldwide celebratio­n of its achievemen­ts and worth - even as it runs concentrat­ion camps, crushes dissent at home and abroad and terrorizes journalist­s, lawyers and anyone else with an independen­t spirit. These companies alone have the ability to withdraw that endorsemen­t. Without keeping a single athlete from competing, they can use their powerful platforms to repudiate these abuses rather than reward them. They will make a statement at the least, and at the best they could persuade if not China then other countries eager to host to change their conduct.

A simple question must be put to any Western firm affiliatin­g itself with these Games: Why are you sponsoring the Olympics in a country sponsoring a genocide? There is only one good answer: We’ve decided we won’t.

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