The Irish Mail on Sunday

Chinese claiming US have a plan to sabotage Olympics

- By Sam Lovett

CHINA’S foreign ministry and an official newspaper have accused the United States of planning to ‘sabotage’ the Beijing Winter Olympics by paying athletes from some countries to make half-hearted efforts in competitio­n and to criticise the host nation.

The allegation­s were made a week before the Games start amid tensions between the two superpower­s that has included a diplomatic boycott of the event by the United States, which has been joined by several other countries.

Asked about the Chinese allegation­s, the US Embassy in Beijing reiterated a previous position that Washington was not coordinati­ng a global campaign regarding participat­ion at the Olympics.

China Daily, an Englishlan­guage newspaper run by the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s Publicity Department, on Friday evening cited unnamed sources as saying the United States has a plan to ‘incite athletes from various countries to express their discontent toward China, play passively in competitio­n and even refuse to take part’.

In return, it said, Washington would provide a large amount of compensati­on and ‘mobilise global resources’ to help protect the reputation of athletes who choose to compete passively.

Asked if the Chinese foreign ministry believes the allegation to be valid, a ministry spokespers­on told Reuters yesterday that the report has ‘exposed the real intention of some Americans to politicise sports and to sabotage and interfere with the Beijing Winter Olympics’.

The spokespers­on said he strongly condemned the attempts by some Americans to ‘buy off’ athletes and ‘cause trouble’ during the Games, adding that these attempts are ‘doomed to fail’.

A US Embassy spokesman said yesterday: ‘We were not and are not coordinati­ng a global campaign regarding participat­ion at the Olympics.

‘US athletes are entitled to express themselves freely in line with the spirit and charter of the Olympics, which includes advancing human rights,’ the

spokesman said. The United States announced in December a diplomatic boycott of the Games over what it called China’s human rights

‘atrocities’, a move followed by allies Australia, Britain and Canada, but that does not prevent US athletes from travelling to Beijing to compete.

China rejects allegation­s of human rights abuse and has repeatedly lashed out against the politicisa­tion of the Games.

In a message to convey greetings for the Chinese New Year festival next week, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told China-based foreign diplomats that China ‘has the confidence and ability to remove the interferen­ce’ and turn the Winter Games into an event that promotes friendship and mutual understand­ing.

 ?? ?? HUMAN RIGHTS: A protest in Washington against the Chinese government
HUMAN RIGHTS: A protest in Washington against the Chinese government

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