National Post

Feds won’t boycott Beijing olympics

Decision up to olympic Committee

- Ryan tumilty

OT TAWA • Despite the nearly 800-day arbitrary detention of two Canadians and a “genocide” of Uyghur muslims in China, the Trudeau government is allowing the Canadian Olympic Committee to make the decision alone on participat­ion in the 2022 Beijing Olympics.

The Beijing Olympics are scheduled to hold their opening ceremonies one year from Thursday, on Feb. 4, 2022, but there have been widespread calls for countries to boycott the Games from human rights groups and activists in Hong Kong.

“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,” said Camille Gagné-raynauld, a spokespers­on for Foreign Affairs minister marc Garneau, who was unavailabl­e for an interview Wednesday.

“We will continue to work alongside the Canadian Olympic and Paralympic Committees and all sport organizati­ons to support Canadian athletes leading up to all future Games,” she said.

The Canadian Olympic Committee is a volunteer board that meets four times a year, according to the organizati­on’s website. A spokespers­on for the committee said they intend to address calls for a boycott on Thursday.

Two Canadians, michael Kovrig and michael Spavor, have been in custody in China since December 2018, following the arrest of Huawei executive meng Wanzhou in vancouver on a U.S. extraditio­n warrant. Spavor, for the first time in months, received a consular visit from Canada’s ambassador on Wednesday.

The two men have had limited consular access and have been held in prison, while meng has been under house arrest in vancouver, free to move around. If they remain in detention until the Games, they will have spent more than three years in custody.

The Chinese Communist Party has also been accused of imprisonin­g Uyghur people across the Xinjiang region. What the government has called “re-education” centres appear to be an effort to eradicate the culture and faith traditions of Uyghur people and have been coupled with mass surveillan­ce.

A house of Commons committee on internatio­nal issues and human rights concluded last fall, “that the actions of the Chinese Communist Party constitute genocide as laid out in the Genocide Convention.”

The genocide convention is a u.n. document that provides a legal definition of genocide. It is ratified by 152 countries around the world and calls for the prevention and punishment of genocide.

Conservati­ve Foreign Affairs critic Michael Chong said a boycott of the Olympics should at least be considered.

“Conservati­ves are deeply concerned about the genocide of uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in China. We strongly urge the Liberal government to work with Canada’s allies to take action,” he said in an email.

“All options should be on the table, including a boycott of the beijing Winter Olympics in 2022 as part of a wider plan to work with our allies to reset relations with China.”

Canada’s former ambassador to China, david Mulroney, said it is clear the government is hoping to avoid the issue.

“We’re not talking about it because the government desperatel­y doesn’t want to talk about it.”

Mulroney said there is so much evidence coming out of China of the horrendous treatment of the uyghur people, as well as a crackdown on democracy in hong Kong and the fate of the two Michaels, that it should be obvious Canada can’t attend the games.

“We’ve got two Canadians who are being held as hostages. We’ve got China dismantlin­g hong Kong, and continuing its repression into Tibet, so I just don’t see how we can go there.”

Mulroney said hopefully Canada is working quietly to build a coalition with other like-minded countries, so any boycott will be part of a group of countries.

“It’s worth doing, alone, but it’s much better and smarter to do it with others and to find others, and that used to be the kind of thing that Canada was good at building a consensus on a practical way forward.”

Canada’s last Olympic boycott came in 1980, when the games were held in Moscow. Canada along with the united States and many other nations boycotted the games in response to the then Soviet union’s invasion of Afghanista­n.

At the time, Canada’s external affairs minister Liberal Mark Macguigan stood in the house of Commons and announced the Pierre Trudeau government’s intention to boycott the games.

“We have decided that the circumstan­ces leave us no choice, but to urge the Canadian Olympic Associatio­n to inform the organizing committee for the 1980 Olympics that Canadian athletes will not be participat­ing in the games.”

Macguigan’s decision came not long after the Liberals took power and the Conservati­ves under Joe Clark had similar plans to boycott the games.

Mulroney said the Chinese Communist Party will use the games to distract from their human rights record and crackdowns on democracy.

“We get dazzled by these things, and they’re going to attempt to do that in 2022 in beijing. but the reality is we’ve just had too much evidence of what’s happening,” he said.

he said if Western countries see no change in China’s action and still attend the games it sends the wrong message to the ruling Communist Party.

“There’s also a sense, particular­ly for the party that they’re securing the compliance of the world. And that’s really, really dangerous,” he said. “We submitted to it in 2008, look where we are now. Why allow that to happen again?”

 ?? TINGSHU WANG / reuters ?? Canada’s former ambassador to China, David Mulroney, said there is so much evidence of China’s brutal treatment of the Uyghur people, a crackdown on democracy in Hong Kong and the fate of the two Canadians named Michael, that it should be obvious Canada can’t attend the Beijing Olympics.
TINGSHU WANG / reuters Canada’s former ambassador to China, David Mulroney, said there is so much evidence of China’s brutal treatment of the Uyghur people, a crackdown on democracy in Hong Kong and the fate of the two Canadians named Michael, that it should be obvious Canada can’t attend the Beijing Olympics.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada