Nancy Pelosi backs diplomatic boycott of 2022 Beijing Olympics
WASHINGTON — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) called Tuesday for a diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Beijing Olympics, citing human rights abuses by China’s government.
“We cannot proceed as if nothing is wrong about the Olympics going to China,” Pelosi said during a joint video hearing of the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission and the Congressional-Executive Commission on China.
Rather than advocating for a full boycott of next year’s Winter Games, in which countries would keep their athletes away entirely and corporate sponsors would stay away, too, Pelosi instead said world leaders should not attend the competition because “of a genocide that is ongoing while you’re sitting there in your seats.”
“Honor your athletes at home. Let’s have a diplomatic boycott if, in fact, this Olympics takes place,” Pelosi said. “Silence is inexcusable.”
With 3% of its population vaccinated, and Tokyo and other prefectures under extended states of emergency, there’s no justification for Japan hosting the Olympics.
The Beijing Games are slated to begin Feb. 4, 2022, just six months after the postponed Summer Olympics in Tokyo are scheduled to end. Human rights groups have met several times in the last year with the International Olympic Committee, asking that these Olympics be moved out of China, which also hosted the 2008 Summer Games.
Last week, rights groups and Western nations led by the United States, Britain and Germany accused China of massive crimes against the Uyghur minority in the western region of Xinjiang and demanded unimpeded access for U.N. experts.
Lantos Commission co-chair Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.Y.) opened the hearing by calling on the “IOC and all interested parties including the United States to find a new host city — or boycott.”
“In granting Beijing host status for the Olympic Games, we are crowning a barbarous regime with laurels while we should be condemning their abuse and genocide,” Smith wrote in his prepared remarks.
He said the IOC and U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee were invited to attend the hearing but did not.
Last week, USOPC chief executive Sarah Hirshland wrote a letter to Congress to lay out the group’s long-held stance that boycotts do not help geopolitical issues in host countries and put athletes training for the Olympics under a “cloud of uncertainty.”
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