Lethbridge Herald

O’Toole wants Winter Olympics relocated

CONSERVATI­VE LEADER CITES TREATMENT OF UIGHURS

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole is calling on the government to push for the 2022 Winter Olympics to be moved outside China amid “genocide” against minority Uighurs.

“I think Canadians would agree that it would violate fundamenta­l ethical principles to participat­e in an Olympic Games hosted by a country that is committing a genocide against part of its population,” he said Tuesday.

O’Toole said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau should reach out to the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee to seek to move the games. Canada “should not be sending athletes to China in the middle of a genocide,” he said, but stopped short of stating Canada should boycott the Olympics — or step up to host them.

China has been accused of using forced birth control to limit Uighur births and detention camps to indoctrina­te the mostly-Muslim minority into mainstream Chinese society.

Beijing has denied any wrongdoing in Xinjiang province, saying it is running a voluntary employment and languagetr­aining program.

Trudeau said genocide is an “extremely loaded” term that should be applied cautiously and in strict accordance with internatio­nally recognized criteria.

“There is no question there have been tremendous human rights abuses coming out of Xinjiang,” he said

Tuesday.

Use of the word must be “properly justified and demonstrat­ed so as not to weaken the applicatio­n of `genocide’ in situations in the past.”

Whether the term applies to China is “something we should be looking at in the case of the Uighurs,” he said.

The Canadian Olympic Committee and Canadian Paralympic Committee along with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee “are looking very closely” at calls for relocation of the games, Trudeau added.

O’Toole’s demand follows a letter from more than a dozen federal lawmakers from all parties earlier this month, calling for relocation of the games outside China due to what they deemed a “genocidal campaign” against Uighurs and other Muslim minorities.

The letter, whose signatorie­s include 13 MPs as well as gold medallist JeanLuc Brassard, came after a call from some 180 human rights groups to boycott the Beijing games, slated to kick off Feb. 4, 2022.

Ottawa’s delicate handling of the issue comes amid heightened tensions with the global superpower over the past two years following Beijing’s demand that Canada release a top executive of communicat­ions giant Huawei who is wanted on fraud charges in the United States.

Meng Wanzhou, who is also the daughter of the company’s founder, denies the charges, which China says are politicall­y motivated as part of a U.S. effort to stifle the nation’s economic expansion.

Former Canadian diplomat Michael Kovrig and Canadian entreprene­ur Michael Spavor were rounded up by Chinese authoritie­s nine days after the RCMP arrested the Chinese high-tech scion at the Vancouver airport in December 2018 on a U.S. extraditio­n warrant.

Bob Rae, Canada’s ambassador to the United Nations, called on the United Nations in November to investigat­e whether China’s persecutio­n of ethnic Muslim Uighurs in Xinjiang constitute­s genocide.

A Canadian parliament­ary subcommitt­ee concluded in an October report that China’s treatment of Uighurs does amount to genocide, a characteri­zation the country rejected as baseless.

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