USA TODAY International Edition

Boycott Beijing’s 2022 Olympics

President Biden, don’t reward China’s slow genocide of up to 3 million Uyghurs

- John Katko Rep. John Katko of New York is the lead Republican on the House Committee on Homeland Security.

Make no mistake. China is actively engaged in a systematic genocide including but not limited to forced labor, arbitrary imprisonme­nt, torture and forced sterilizat­ion.

I called on President Joe Biden to boycott the Beijing 2022 Olympics in protest of the ongoing genocide being committed by the Chinese Communist Party.

I did this for two reasons: One, it’s the right thing to do, and two, it’s incumbent upon the United States to shine light on what is happening in China and the Chinese Communist Party’s multifacet­ed and multidecad­e campaign to undermine our security and way of life.

I want to make clear that I want the 2022 Winter Olympic Games to be held. I want our athletes to compete in this honored tradition. The Games just cannot be held in China.

Right now, the Chinese Communist Party’s slow- motion genocide of up to 3 million Uyghurs, an ethnic minority population, is occurring within China’s own borders and it’s simply telling the world to look away.

Free nations of the world

Nations and persons who speak out risk being sanctioned and maligned, as we have seen time and time again via Chinese state media.

This total commitment to obscure the facts and compel the world to simply nod along in complicity is terrifying. It also appears to be working; in a February town hall, Biden himself parroted Chinese Communist Party’s talking points, acquiescin­g to Xi Jinping and his dictatoria­l approach to engaging with the world community.

This tactic is an indication of a larger problem, as the free nations of the world increasing­ly grapple with a dominant and aggressive China.

The Chinese Communist Party represents the greatest threat to the homeland and economic security of not only the United States but all democratic nations, for the next 50 years.

Handing China the world stage for a contest that is supposed to be conducted for the good of all humanity to promote fellowship among nations will be nothing more than a soft power win for a regime that seeks to lie and manipulate the rest of the globe for its own benefit at the expense freedom, justice and human rights.

Indeed, the world has already been tainted by the evils of this genocide far beyond the borders of China.

Until a recent action was taken by the Department of Homeland Security, cotton picked by Uyghur forced labor originated from China into the global textile supply chain.

Now, U. S. ports of entry will detain those shipments.

We have also seen the same types of surveillan­ce and tracking technologi­es employed to enact a digital authoritar­ianism on the Uyghurs proliferat­e around the world via China’s “Safe Cities” initiative­s.

Perhaps most alarmingly, we have seen our longtime ally Australia — which has boldly sounded the alarm on Chinese aggression to its domestic security on many fronts — viciously sanctioned and economical­ly bullied as the Chinese Communist Party attempts to silence and isolate Australia from the world.

What Olympics should be about

Pressure is mounting on the President Biden to step up and lead. National figures from Nikki Haley, a former U. S. ambassador to the United Nations, to more than a dozen members of Congress, as well as internatio­nal allies, including Dutch and Canadian lawmakers, have echoed the need to hold China accountabl­e for its abhorrent human rights violations and ongoing acts of genocide.

The Olympics should be about sporting tradition, fellowship and the furtheranc­e of humanity in a unified manner. It should not be a platform for an authoritar­ian regime to showcase itself while persuading the rest of the world to turn a blind eye to the threat it presents.

Canada’s House of Commons and the Dutch Parliament have already stepped forward, and I applaud them for doing so.

If genocide and the associated actions the Chinese Communist Party has undertaken against millions of its own citizens are not sufficient for the world to universall­y act, then I don’t know what is.

 ?? ALEX EDELMAN/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Uyghurs of the East Turkistan National Awakening Movement rally outside the U. S. State Department last month calling on President Joe Biden to increase pressure on China.
ALEX EDELMAN/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Uyghurs of the East Turkistan National Awakening Movement rally outside the U. S. State Department last month calling on President Joe Biden to increase pressure on China.
 ??  ?? Rep. John Katko
Rep. John Katko

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