Bangkok Post

Controvers­y greets countdown

Covid fears, boycotts loom large over event

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BEIJING: The Beijing Winter Olympics begin one month on Tuesday with diplomatic boycotts, the coronaviru­s and the fate of Peng Shuai all hanging heavy over the Games.

The Chinese capital on Feb 4-20 will become the first host of a Winter and Summer Olympics, having staged the Games in 2008, seen then as a comingout party for what has since become the world’s second-largest economy.

This time, China’s communist rulers hope the Games will inspire 300 million winter sports enthusiast­s and help unite the world in the face of the pandemic.

With the Games taking place inside a “bubble” cocooning the nearly 3,000 athletes together with non-competitor­s, it looks being the most restricted mass sporting event since Covid-19.

Organisers have pledged to make the Games “green, inclusive, open and clean”, but environmen­talists question that claim and smog remains a frequent hazard in China, especially in winter.

Hinting at the controvers­ies which have surrounded the Games, Foreign Minister Wang Yi told state media: “The political manipulati­on of a few Western politician­s will not damage the excitement of the Olympics, but will only expose their own ugliness.”

Rights groups have long called for a boycott over China’s human rights record, especially its treatment of Uighur Muslims in the northwest region of Xinjiang.

Last month the Biden administra­tion said it would not send US diplomatic or official representa­tion to the Games over China’s “ongoing genocide and crimes against humanity in Xinjiang and other human rights abuses”.

Beijing warned that the United States “will pay the price” but that did not stop Australia, Britain and Canada joining the diplomatic boycott. Athletes of those countries will still compete.

China is also facing demands to guarantee the safety of tennis player Peng.

The 35-year-old, a two-time Grand Slam doubles champion, was not heard from for nearly three weeks after accusing former vice-premier Zhang Gaoli of sexual assault.

Peng has since reappeared in public in China but doubts remain about how free and safe she is. She will loom large over the Games.

Then there is the coronaviru­s. China, where the virus emerged in late 2019, has pursued a zero-Covid strategy with tight border restrictio­ns, lengthy quarantine­s and targeted lockdowns. Xi’an, a city of 13 million people, has been locked down for nearly two weeks.

Omicron is not thought to have driven what is a small outbreak by the standards of other countries, but the highly contagious variant presents a fresh challenge to authoritie­s and the Games.

Omicron has already impacted the Olympics with NHL players no longer coming.

David Shoemaker, chief executive and secretary general of the Canadian Olympic Committee, admitted that “we’re worried”.

“We’re confident that these Games can still be scheduled safely, but we’re taking it day-by-day,” he told local media.

The Olympics, which take place just six months after the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Games, will be held in a “closedloop” bubble where all athletes must be vaccinated, have daily Covid tests and nobody in the bubble will be allowed to leave.

GOLD MEDAL CONTENDERS

The Games will be held in three “zones” and make use of new venues and some from 2008, including the National Stadium, also known as the “Bird’s Nest” stadium, for the opening and closing ceremonies.

China has committed to having spectators — a step forward from Tokyo — but it is still unclear how many there will be and none will be from overseas.

In terms of stars, American ski ace Mikaela Shiffrin is chasing a third Olympic gold but her preparatio­ns have been hit by Covid after she tested positive.

There had also been doubt about “Ice Prince” Yuzuru Hanyu after he suffered an ankle injury but he delivered a sizzling performanc­e in Japan’s recent national ice-skating championsh­ips as he pursues a third Olympic gold.

There will be huge interest too in Chloe Kim, the American snowboarde­r who melted hearts when she won gold aged 17 at the Pyeongchan­g Olympics in 2018, while Eileen Gu looks like being one of the faces of the Games.

The 18-year-old grade-A student and model, born and raised in California, switched from the United States to represent China and is hot favourite for gold in freestyle skiing.

Sports forecaster­s Gracenote estimate that Norway will top the medal table for the second straight Winter Games.

 ?? AFP ?? Children skating outside the ‘Bird’s Nest’ stadium in Beijing where the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2022 Winter Olympics will take place.
AFP Children skating outside the ‘Bird’s Nest’ stadium in Beijing where the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2022 Winter Olympics will take place.

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