The Chinese Saga of Olympic Shame Continues...... Beijing Olympics: Let the politics begin/IHT
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The Chinese Saga of Olympic Shame Continues...... Beijing Olympics: Let the politics begin/IHT         

Group: soc.culture.hongkong · Group Profile
Author: Micky Wong
Date: Aug 13, 2007 08:04

The Chinese Saga of Olympic Shame Continues...... Beijing Olympics: Let
the politics begin/IHT

International Herald Tribune

Beijing Olympics: Let the politics begin

By Jim Yardley

Monday, August 13, 2007

BEIJING: The Communist Party expends much effort trying to remove
politics from daily life in China, and now it wants to remove politics
from the Olympics, too. Beijing Olympic officials are taking the line
that political protesters agitating about China are violating the spirit
and charter of the Games.

Poor sports, so to speak.

But if anything was evident last week when Beijing staged a one-year
countdown to the 2008 Games, it was that eliminating politics from the
Olympics was about as likely as eliminating medals. Beijing may have
envisioned a public relations opportunity, but so did an array of
advocacy groups that spent the week whipsawing China on human rights
violations, press freedom and Tibet.

If a few stunts were daring - protesters unfurled a "Free Tibet" banner
on the Great Wall - the criticisms were not new. What did change was the
way the Olympics amplified the dissent, even for a nonevent like the
one-year countdown. Media attention intensified merely because the
Olympics were in town.

"All of these voices are going to become stronger and stronger, not
weaker and weaker, as the Games approach," said John MacAloon, an
Olympic historian who has advised the Beijing Olympic committee on
managing the traditional torch relay. "All Olympic Games are, of course,
highly politically charged and sensitive in some regions of the world.
How could they not be?"

For about as long as the modern Games have existed, they have served as
a stage for politics as much as sport. Berlin 1936 was Hitler and Jesse
Owens. Helsinki 1952 was the beginning of the Cold War. Mexico City 1968
was the Black Power salute. The blood of 11 slain Israeli athletes
stained Munich 1972. Moscow 1980 meant boycotts, as did Los Angeles 1984.

Beijing knows politics cannot really be tabled. Even before China was
selected in 2001, international opinion was sharply divided between
those who thought the Games could help reform the world's largest
authoritarian state and those who thought they would simply validate the
regime. Politicization has only deepened in recent months with
controversies over pollution and the safety of Chinese products
(including some Olympic trinkets).

One historical comparison studied by the Communist Party and its critics
is Seoul 1988. There the Olympics reshaped political history when public
anticipation of the Games fed demonstrations that toppled an
authoritarian regime and ushered in democracy.

Does anyone really believe that that kind of political collapse is
possible for Beijing? Almost no one. But in the abstract, Seoul gives
sustenance to those mindful of an Olympic formula that can at least
accelerate political liberalization and create more official tolerance
for dissent in China: An authoritarian state, eager for validation,
wobbles under the heat of international scrutiny and criticism and then
loosens its grip.

The Communist Party is eager to stage a successful Olympics, and the
Chinese public is ecstatic about holding the Games. China regards the
event as a coming-out party to highlight its economic rise and emergence
as a world power. But that eagerness is also providing an opening for
the critics.

That was clear when the actress Mia Farrow criticized China for
contributing to the atrocities in Darfur through its huge subsidies to
oil-rich Sudan. China had seemed indifferent about international
criticism over its role in Sudan until Farrow wrote an article in The
Wall Street Journal in March that popularized the phrase "Genocide
Olympics." The article pointed to Steven Spielberg for his involvement
in the staging of the opening ceremonies in Beijing. Boycott talk then
picked up a bit of steam. By August, China was suddenly part of a
unanimous UN Security Council endorsing peacekeepers for Darfur. Some
politicians in Europe and the United States have continued to promote a
boycott, but the chances seem slim.

Still, other advocacy groups got the message. In April, the Chinese
authorities arrested four pro-Tibetan independence protesters who had
climbed to the Mount Everest base camp and hung a banner to protest
plans to take the Olympic torch through the Tibetan Himalayas.

Countdown week presented another opportunity. Human Rights Watch and
Amnesty International released reports denouncing China as failing to
honor its Olympic obligations on human rights. The Committee to Protect
Journalists said China was still impeding foreign journalists and
jailing domestic ones, despite promises to allow unfettered reporting.
Reporters Without Borders managed to stage a protest in Beijing, only to
see the police briefly detain the foreign journalists covering it.

Lhadon Tethong, an advocate for Tibetan independence, said she thought
the Olympics might finally have created some space for open dissent in
China. She flew to Beijing from New York and spent countdown week filing
updates on her Tibet blog. She went to the hotel where Jacques Rogge,
president of the International Olympic Committee, was staying and
shouted out questions about Tibet. The police later confronted her with
printed pages of her blog and deported her to Hong Kong. She said the
protesters who had hung the Tibet banner on the Great Wall were deported
on the same plane.

"In the end, we weren't surprised they got us kicked out because we know
they are not open and free," Tethong said by telephone after landing in
Canada on Thursday night. "No IOC, no press and no Olympics are going to
change the way they rule that place."

MacAloon, a cultural anthropologist at the University of Chicago, said
the torch relay, which begins in March, could cause major political
friction.

He also predicted that press freedom would become an increasingly
prominent issue because it directly challenges the control that the
Communist Party is accustomed to wielding. Tensions already emerged last
week, and MacAloon predicted more friction if officials, for fear of bad
publicity, refused to allow reporters to follow the torch through the
restive regions of China.

Many dissidents in China say the ultimate barometer of success is
whether the Olympics force the Communist Party to further open up
society and advance political reform. Hu Jia, a prominent Beijing
dissident, said the party considered domestic dissidents, more than
foreign protesters or advocacy groups, the most serious challenge to
staging the Olympics.

"The reason for a 'politicized' Olympics lies with the Chinese
government," Hu said. "It's repressing dissidents and activists under
the name of the Olympics. At the same time, it is trying to prove the
legality and validity of its rule through the Olympics."

Hu should know. He has spent much of this year under house arrest.

John Vinocur is on vacation. The Politicus column will resume Sept. 4.

International Herald Tribune Copyright (c) 2007 The International Herald
Tribune | www.iht.com
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