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Opinion

The Beijing Paralympics were a diversionary farce from a totalitarian regime

As Jews, we need to remember the lessons of the 1936 games

March 14, 2022 12:28
GettyImages-1384830693 paralympics
3 min read

It’s a farce. How can China hold sporting host nation status until the end of the Winter Paralympics this Sunday, whilst its authoritarian government keeps on committing horrific human rights abuses. We know from Russia, that human rights abuses and dictatorships have to be taken seriously. How can it possibly be that President Xi Jinping is still allowed to benefit from the best distraction he could hope for in Ukraine?

Russian athletes have rightly been banned from competing under their flag Beijing Paralympics and the 2022 World Cup in Qatar after Vladimir Putin’s devastating invasion of Ukraine. Yet with totalitarian cadres around the world watching closely, we can’t ignore other disgraceful dictatorships. Leaders guilty of atrocities, have hosted countless international events and we’ve often played into their blood-stained hands. 

Watching Winter Olympians and Paralympians hurtling down the slopes in Beijing, it seems that the Chinese government’s aim was to deliberately divert attention from their own despicable behaviour. Millions of Uyghurs in China are still interned in concentration camps and subjected to ‘re-education’, forced labour and forced sterilisation. Although the UK and others have imposed a ‘diplomatic boycott’ of the Games the focus is still, incredibly, on Paralympic medal counts. But the Chinese government’s commitment to human rights is about as real as the fake snow it shipped in to make its outdoor venues skiable.

Artificially covering the ground in a layer of deceptive, blanketing snow is a symbol of the ‘sportswashing’ underway. The shine of ice and medals deflects from dire human rights violations, misdirecting the world’s gaze. This cynical perversion of truth is exacerbated by intimidating China’s citizens, who were ordered to ‘make way for the Games’ at all costs. Even raising valid environmental concerns about the 190 million litres of shipped-in snow can be extremely dangerous for the Chinese public.

Topics:

China