Filed under: IN BED | Tags: 2008 Olympics, China, Death Penalty, Hu Jia, Human Rights
We hear it all the time: the Olympics ain’t about politics. But in spite of this, it always has been and it always will be.
I could rant on and on about how the two have been excessively entangeld and intertwined throughout history–the list is long that Wikipedia even has an article on it. But in the interests of the viability of WordPress’s servers, I’ll only mention a significant few. Probably the most cited example of the Olympics being used as nationalistic propaganda dates back to the 1936 Olympics held by Nazi Germany; South African apartheid led to their exclusion from the Olympics; the boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympic in retaliation for their involvement in Afghanistan; and the 1984 LA Olympics that followed that. Hell, even China boycotted the Olympics before. In the 1976 Montreal Olympics, the PRC boycotted the games due to the IOC’s attempt to admit the ROC as an independent country (the ROC in return boycotted for the IOC’s admittance of the PRC to the games). So, who are they to talk?
But as I said, the protests ain’t about politics. Its about a promise.
In order to secure their bid for hosting the games, China had to make a bunch of flowery promises to the IOC and other countries. One of the bigger (and more important) promise that they made to the rest of the world (and to their own citizens) was that they would improve their human rights.
This is evidenced by the speech that the Mayor of Beijing, Liu Qi, gave to the IOC back in 2001:
I want to say that the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games will have the following special features:
– They will help promote our economic and social progress and will also benefit the further development of our human rights cause…
Ladies and Gentleman, I am very confident that Beijing will organize an excellent Games in 2008 and the Games in Beijing will leave a unique legacy to China and to sport. Let us all share this unique legacy together.
Thank you very much.
And of course, this promise was substantiated by other prominant officials, the Foreign Ministry, and China’s Olympic Committee.
But human rights in China is far from improving. If anything, China has undergone regression and deproved. Instead of opening up and allowing for freer speech, it has cracked down on dissidents such as Hu Jia and locked them up to prevent them from dissenting. Instead of allowing for religious freedom, the Public Security Bureau issued out handbooks for policemen containing English phrases on “How to Stop Illegal News Coverage”. The book also teaches the policemen the English needed to tell a journalist, who’s interviewing people about Falun Gong, that he or she is arrested.
Below is an excerpt of the practical dialogue that the handbook includes:
P(oliceman): Excuse me, sir. Stop, please.
F(oreign journalist): Why?
P: Are you gathering news here?
F: Yes.
P: About what?
F: About Falun Gong.
P: Show me your press card and your reporter’s permit.
F: Here you are.
P: What news are you permitted to cover?
F: The Olympic Games.
P: Falun Gong has nothing to do with the Games…. You should only cover the Games.
F: But I’m interested in Falun Gong.
P: It’s beyond the limit of your coverage and illegal. As a foreign reporter in China you should obey China law and do nothing against your status.
F: Oh, I see. May I go now?
P: No. Come with us.
F: What for?
P: To clear up this matter.
China also executes more people than the rest of the world combined. Amnesty estimates that the state kills around 7500 people per year. Instead of that number going down though, the number of crimes in which execution is permitted has in fact gone up. If we use this figure:
(7500 executions/365 leap year days) x 17 days of gaming = 350 executions during the Olympics
So the next time you hear Jiang Yu say that crackpot troublemakers are confused that Olympics ain’t about politics. You can tell her that they aren’t making a fuss over politics–they’re making a fuss over a promise that China didn’t keep.












