Hearing mulls 2022 Winter Olympic boycott over China human rights record May 20, 2021By Mark Pattison Catholic News Service Filed Under: Feature, News, World News Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., speaks on Capitol Hill in Washington Feb. 23, 2021. Merkley in chair of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, which monitors human rights and rule of law developments in the People’s Republic of China. The commission co-sponsored a May 18 hearing on Capitol Hill on at “China, Genocide and the Olympics.” (CNS photo/Erin Scott, Pool via Reuters) WASHINGTON (CNS) — A congressional panel, during a May 18 hearing, weighed the possibility of a diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing to call attention to China’s long-standing human rights abuses. Another tactic discussed was to find an alternate site to host the Winter Games. Sites floated included Salt Lake City; Vancouver, British Columbia; and Lake Placid, New York — the sites of the 2002, 2010 and 1980 Winter Games, respectively. “If we can delay an Olympics for a year because of a pandemic, surely we can delay the Olympics for a year because of a genocide,” said Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., co-chair of the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission, which sponsored the hearing along with the and the Congressional-Executive Commission on China. Both the Trump and Biden administrations have labeled China’s treatment of ethnic Uighurs a genocide. “There would be a huge domino effect” if a North American city offered to host the Winter Olympics, said Reggie Littlejohn, president of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers and a hearing witness. “This hearing could be the epicenter of that.” No panelist, or member of Congress, suggested during the hearing that Olympians be barred from competing, but that participating countries send only their athletes — but no diplomatic delegation that could lend legitimacy to the Games. “Big business wants to make lots of money, and it doesn’t seem to matter what cruelty — even genocide — that the host nation commits,” said Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., the Lantos commission’s other co-chair. Smith said he would invite U.S.-based Winter Olympics sponsors to testify at a future hearing. U.S. sponsors to date are Snickers, Airbnb, Coca-Cola, Dow, General Electric, Intel, Procter & Gamble and Visa. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said she has “long since stopped being naive” that China would live up to expectations about improved human rights, dating back to talks in 1993 about China joining the World Trade Organization. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., holds her weekly news conference in Washington May 13, 2021. At a May 18 Capitol Hill hearing, she said the U.S. and other countries should boycott the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing diplomatically because of China’s human rights abuses. She and others testifying said participating countries should send only their athletes — but no diplomatic delegation that could lend legitimacy to the Games. (CNS photo/Evelyn Hockstein, Reuters) but Pelosi also was the first of several speakers to equate China with Nazi Germany, which hosted the 1936 Olympics in Berlin and gave the Third Reich credibility on the international stage. She noted German strongman Adolf Hitler, in response to Germany’s treatment of Jews, is said to have remarked, “Has anyone ever heard of the Armenians?” Only 33 nations, including the United States, Canada and the Vatican, have declared the mass murder and ethnic cleansing of ethnic Armenians to be a genocide, many not until its centennial neared in 2015. “We cannot continue to give Beijing a blank check in the hope that their behavior will change,” Pelosi said. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., chair of the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, said the commission has “painstakingly documented China’s assault on basic human rights, listing Tibetan Buddhists, the Xinjiang Muslim Uighurs, and most recently assaults in Hong Kong, as well as “increasingly through the coercion of anyone abroad who challenges the Chinese government’s party line.” Merkley denounced the International Olympic Committee’s “shameful” awarding of the 2022 Winter Games to China. “An event designed to uplift the human spirit,” he said, “is being held in a nation that is crushing the human spirit.” “When Nixon went to China,” said Rep. Tom Suozzi, D-N.Y., “we thought things would get better by now.” “China committed gross human rights violations in the run-up to the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing,” said Yang Jianli, founder and president of Citizen Power Initiatives for China. In 2015, the IOC was given new human rights assurances before awarding the 2022 Winter Olympics to Beijing. “In other words, it’s 2008 all over again, Actually, much, much worse,” Yang said. “Genocide is the antithesis of the development of humankind.” Beijing is the first city in Olympic history to be selected to host both Summer (2008) and Winter Olympics. Next year’s Winter Olympic Games and Winter Paralympic Games are scheduled to take place Feb. 2-20 and March 4-13, respectively. Chinese President Xi Jinping sees “national purposes” in hosting the Winter Olympics and is “personally guiding” the effort, said Susan V. Lawrence, a Congressional Research Service specialist in Asian affairs. Signs for the 2022 Olympic Winter Games are seen at the National Aquatics Center in Beijing April 1, 2021. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said at a hearing May 18 the U.S. and other countries should boycott the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing diplomatically because of China’s human rights abuses. She and others testifying said participating countries should send only their athletes — but no diplomatic delegation that could lend legitimacy to the Games. (CNS photo/Tingshu Wang, Reuters) These include the “development of a new megacity in China” — Zhangjiakou, 125 miles from Beijing, which will host some sports — “stimulate the national spirit and to rally the sons and daughters of China at home and abroad to rejuvenation of the Chinese nation,” and to showcase the “alleged advantages of China’s national system,” Lawrence said. In 2016, “China declared a people’s war on its own people, the Uighurs,” including her own brother, said Rayhan Asat, a human rights lawyer and advocate. She said her brother, Ekpar, was guilty of nothing but “excelling while Uighur.” Ekpar Asat was arrested in 2016 upon his return to China from the United States, where he took part in a State Department-sponsored international visitors program. “My brother is tortured and continues to be held in torture,” Rayhan Asat said, adding that his continued torture is “perhaps due to my consistent advocacy over the past years.” But “if the party thinks I will shut up … they are greatly mistaken,” she said, vowing she will be “resilient in the face of genocide.” Witness Samuel Chu, managing director of the Hong Kong Democracy Council, said that as a boy he fantasized of being part of the Chinese ping-pong Olympic team. He added he was grateful when Hong Kong won its first, and only, Olympic gold medal in sailing at the Summer Olympics in Atlanta in 1996, one year before Hong Kong was handed over by the United Kingdom to China. “The fall of Hong Kong has been swift,” Chu said. Now, he added, “the Hong Kong legislative system is stacked with Beijing loyalists.” Two years ago, Chu noted, the Chinese Communist Party heard from a delegation of Hong Kong pro-democracy leaders. Today, he said, each member of that delegation is either in prison or in exile. “All of this has taken place and unfolded in plain sight,” Chu said. “No one can claim (they didn’t know) before they set foot on Chinese snow next year” for the Olympics. If these abuses can’t generate a response, he added, “nothing else will, and shame on us.” Also see Pope praises courageous, resilient faith of Catholics persecuted in past Christians seek a public holiday on Easter Sunday in Bangladesh Red hat is ‘call to martyrdom’ for Philippine bishop outspoken on country’s war on drugs As Poles remember murdered priest, Catholic researchers’ work on communism’s martyrs continues Faithful urged to pray for religious liberty with novena ahead of Nov. 24 feast of Christ the King Pro-lifers express religious liberty concerns after Harris rejects ‘concessions’ on abortion Copyright © 2021 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Print