China warns US over 'interfering' in Winter Olympics | Inquirer Sports

China warns US over ‘interfering’ in Winter Olympics

/ 05:38 PM January 28, 2022

A Chinese flag and a Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics flag flutter at the Beijing Winter Olympic Games village in Beijing on December 24, 2021.

A Chinese flag and a Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics flag flutter at the Beijing Winter Olympic Games village in Beijing on December 24, 2021. (Photo by Jade GAO / AFP)

China warned the United States to “stop interfering” in the Winter Olympics on Thursday, a week before the controversy-hit Games are due to start in Beijing.

As the first city to host both a Winter and Summer Games, Beijing has been hoping to turn next week’s sports extravaganza into a soft power triumph.

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But the lead-up has been clouded by a US-led diplomatic boycott over China’s human rights record, particularly its policy towards its Uyghur Muslim minority in the Xinjiang region that Washington has labeled a “genocide.”

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China’s top diplomat Wang Yi spoke with his US counterpart Secretary of State Antony Blinken, according to a foreign ministry statement Thursday.

“The most urgent priority right now is that the US should stop interfering in the Beijing Winter Olympics,” Wang said during the call.

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The US government and lawmakers in five Western countries have declared China’s treatment of the Uyghurs in its Xinjiang region a “genocide,” with France’s National Assembly the latest to do so this month.

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Rights campaigners have accused the International Olympic Committee of turning a blind eye to what they say is a litany of abuses in China, including in Tibet and its ongoing clampdown on free expression in Hong Kong.

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Activists grabbed the spotlight at the lighting ceremony in Greece by unfurling a Tibetan flag and a banner that read “no genocide.”

Beijing has repeatedly railed against what it has dubbed the “politicization” of sport and the International Olympic Committee has made similar calls to separate sport and world affairs.

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China’s President Xi Jinping had a rare pandemic-era encounter with Olympic chief Thomas Bach this week.

With Beijing cracking down on dissent before the Games, AFP also spoke to multiple human rights activists and academics in China who had been blocked on WeChat messaging app accounts restricted in recent weeks.

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Authorities have also detained two prominent human rights activists, while a third rights lawyer missing since early December is believed by relatives to be in secret detention.

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TAGS: Beijing 2022, China, United States, Winter Olympics

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