Despite
all protestations to the contrary, sports have never
been apolitical. And among sports, the Olympics have
probably been the most political of all, from their
origins in ancient Greece when different city states
used them as another means of war, to the more recent
episodes when either the host country or other nations
have used the events as vehicles for geopolitical
statements or means of settling political scores.
So perhaps it is no surprise that, several months
before they are actually held, the Beijing Olympics
scheduled for August 2008 have already become the
focus of so much hectic political activity in different
parts of the world. Even so, the nature of the various
protests around this particular event, the different
features of China's reality and the Chinese government's
policies that have been taken up for criticism, and
the ferocity of the moral righteousness that have
accompanied the criticism, do occasion surprise.
The surprise is also because in the recent past the
Olympics have been largely non-controversial at least
with respect to the location, even if there have been
other issues related to the sports themselves (such
as doping of athletes and the like). Yet the 2008
Beijing Olympics - the first Olympics to be held in
the developing world in twenty years and only the
third after Mexico City in 1968 and Seoul in 1988
– has become the object of almost continuous protest
for several months now. These protests have occurred
on the basis of a wide range of constantly shifting
accusations against host country China.
The government of China had obviously seen the Beijing
Olympics as an enormous international public relations
exercise, marking the recent emergence of China as
a major player on the world's economic and political
stage. It also had internal socio-political repercussions
in China, with the Olympics designed to add to national
pride and self-confidence, whereby achievement in
sports, glittering new infrastructure and impressive
hospitality become proxies for many other aspects
of self-esteem and cause for celebration.
Yet the carping and the denigration from the rest
of the world began early and have not stopped, although
the professed reasons have varied. It began more than
a year ago with some athletes and sportspersons expressing
fears about high air pollution levels in Beijing,
which they claimed would adversely affect their performance
at the event and possibly even their future health.
Promises by the Chinese government to address air
pollution concerns by the time of the games were not
taken seriously. Several high profile athletes such
as marathon runner Haile Gebreselassie and some tennis
players declared that they would not take part because
of these concerns. Next there were comments on the
poor quality of the water supply and urban sanitation
in Beijing, even though these are actually better
than in most cities of the developing world.
Then the criticism became more overtly political.
It began with a focus on China's foreign policy. The
Chinese government was attacked for maintaining relations
with the military junta in Myanmar, especially after
the crackdown on the protest by monks in late 2007.
Surprisingly, even eminent personages such as Desmond
Tutu made statements suggesting that if China did
not take a stance against the military rulers in Myanmar
he would "join a campaign to boycott the Beijing
Olympics". This threat was made even though many
other governments, including the South African government
that Tutu has been a part of, did not make any open
declarations condemning the Myanmar government at
the time.
Next it was China's attitude to Sudan and the trouble
in the Darfur region that came under attack. China
was accused of providing financial and diplomatic
support to the government of Sudan, which in turn
was supporting militia groups against a separatist
uprising in Darfur province. The humanitarian crisis
in Darfur suddenly became China's fault, even though
China was only one among many countries that avoided
taking sides on this internal conflict. Hollywood
stars jumped onto this particular bandwagon, with
actress Mia Farrow calling for a boycott, and Steven
Spielberg resigned from his post as Artistic Advisor
to the Beijing Olympics on this count. Yet it is rare
to hear of any Hollywood stars (including these two)
making public protests against the US government's
open support of so many murderous dictatorships across
the world, in the past or at present.
And now it is the turn of Tibet to become the focus
of anti-China protest. The Tibetan struggle for independence
is around five decades old, and the recognition of
most countries in the world that Tibet is an integral
part of China is of even older duration. The "government-in-exile"
of the Dalai Lama in India has been active in keeping
alive global perceptions of Tibetan demands. These
obviously intensified during and after the recent
violent protests in Tibet, during which rampaging
mobs rioted and were also quelled with force by the
authorities.
But even after that violence subsided, that particular
half-century old struggle has now become the latest
weapon of China critics, and the protests and attempts
to disrupt the passage of the Olympic flame on its
scheduled journey across several countries have been
focussed mainly on the Tibet issue. This most recent
assault by moralistic protestors on what should be
an international symbol of harmony has been based
on the flimsiest of pretexts, and has been followed
by an astonishing series of calls for boycott, especially
in the developed countries.
Note that nothing has really changed on the ground
in Tibet in the past month. All that has happened
is a few very public and prominent protests by some
Tibetan exiles and their supporters in different parts
of the world, which have been given much media attention
and relatively sympathetic treatment by local authorities.
Yet suddenly there are calls from all over the world
to resolve the Tibet problem, including by those whose
own governments have less than admirable human rights
records.
Thus, various European leaders who have systematically
encouraged and promoted avaricious and authoritarian
regimes in their ex-colonies now feel that they must
chastise China and threaten to boycott the Olympics.
President Sarkozy of France has apparently made his
attendance at the opening ceremony conditional upon
"an end to violence against the population and
the release of political prisoners, light to be shed
on the events in Tibet and the opening of dialogue
with the Dalai Lama." Other leaders like Chancellor
Angela Merkel of Germany have already declared that
they will not attend.
In the United States, Presidential candidate Hillary
Clinton has called upon George Bush to boycott the
opening ceremony because of the denial of "human rights"
in Tibet. It is interesting that no one seems to ask
what Ms. Clinton has to say of the human rights of
those held in US prisons in Guantanamo Bay, including
those who were abducted by the Americans from their
own countries in secret "renditions" to undergo torture
on flimsy suspicions of being associated with terrorist
activities. In any case, it hardly behoves those who
have actually sent troops to Iraq as part of a murderous
imperialist invasion and destroyed human security
in that country for more than a decade, to speak of
human rights violations in Tibet.
It is likely that humanitarian concerns were not uppermost
in Ms. Clinton's mind. Rather, it was an attempt at
China-bashing to pander to the grievances of Americans
who are convinced that they are losing jobs to Chinese
workers and worried by that country's recent rise.
Significantly, even the other Democratic presidential
hopeful, Barrack Obama, has duly called for President
Bush to boycott the opening ceremony.
The double standards and false moral superiority of
those who are currently using the Olympics to attack
China are quite striking. But they still do not explain
the question that immediately strikes one: why? Why
is there such anger against China such that any excuse
is immediately seized upon to pour scorn or opprobrium
on it and somehow diminish its attempts to hold the
Olympic Games? What is the sub-text of this rash of
international disapproval? Or, as a Beijing resident
asked a foreign journalist "why do they hate us so
much?"
It could be that it is not hatred that is driving
all this frenzy of criticism, so much as deep disquiet.
Disquiet about the very features that China seeks
to showcase in the Olympics: its newfound economic
strength and continuing international competitiveness;
its enormous and relatively disciplined population
with huge potential for the future; the currently
stable polity and the rapid expansion of infrastructure.
All these can be sources of pride for Chinese, but
they can also be threatening to the outside world
and in particular to imperialism and its allies. Of
course, the lack of internal political democracy makes
it easy for the outside world to find flaws with the
system within which all this is occurring. But the
basic cause of external unease is probably not the
absence of democracy in China, as leaders in the West
have always been able to condone the lack of democracy
elsewhere when it suits them strategically. Rather,
it is probably because these same leaders feel threatened
by the emergence of a new power, and a relative diminution
of their own geopolitical influence. It should be
borne in mind that apparent concern for "human rights"
has now become the chosen instrument of those who
wish to break up big states in the developing world.
So the current cascade of censure and the high moral
tone taken by international leaders and activists
– particularly those in the North – may reflect a
deeper tendency in international relations, a disinclination
to cede power at any level to upstart nations that
should know that their place belongs in the lower
rungs of the global ladder. China is particularly
disturbing because of its sheer size. It is big enough
that its rise would do more than damage existing hierarchies
- it could threaten to overturn the ladder itself.
April 23, 2008.
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