US weighs Beijing boycott
State Department talking to allies about protesting human rights record
The State Department said Tuesday the Biden administration is considering a possible boycott of the upcoming Beijing Winter Olympics to protest China’s human rights record.
Department spokesman Ned Price said the U.S. is consulting with likeminded countries around the world to determine how to proceed. Price said the administration is discussing China strategy, including participation in the Olympics, with a number of partners and allies in order to present a united front.
“Part of our review of those Olympics and our thinking will involve close consultations with partners and allies around the world,” he told reporters. “We have consistently said when it comes to our concerns with the government in Beijing, including Beijing ’s egregious human rights violations, its conduct of genocide in the case of Xingjiang, that what the United States does is meaningful, what the United States does will have impact, but everything we do that brings along our allies and partners will have all the more influence with Beijing.”
Human rights groups are protesting China’s hosting of the Games, which are set to start in February 2022.
They have urged a diplomatic or straight-up boycott of the event to call attention to alleged Chinese abuses against Uyghurs, Tibetans and residents of Hong Kong.
Price declined to say when a decision might be made, but noted there is still almost a year until the Games are set to begin.
“These Games remain some time away. I wouldn’t want to put a timeframe on it, but these discussions are underway,” he said. “It is something that we certainly wish to discuss and it is certainly something that we understand that a coordinated approach will be not only in our interest, but also in the interest of our allies and partners.”
The Beijing Winter Olympics open on Feb. 4, 2022 and China has denied all charges of human rights abuses. It says “political motives” underlie the boycott effort.
Rights groups have met with the International Olympic Committee and have been told the Olympic body must stay politically “neutral.” They have been told by the IOC that China has given “assurances” about human rights conditions.
Both the IOC and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee have said in the past they oppose boycotts.
The USOPC has questioned the effectiveness of boycotts. “We believe the more effective course of action is for the governments of the world and China to engage directly on human rights and geopolitical issues,” it said.