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Activists Press China With 'Genocide Olympics' Label

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  • Activists Press China With 'Genocide Olympics' Label

    ACTIVISTS PRESS CHINA WITH 'GENOCIDE OLYMPICS' LABEL
    Danna Harman

    Christian Science Monitor
    June 26, 2007, Tuesday

    It all started with a petite blonde in a fury. Horrified
    by the violence she saw on trips to Darfur, and angry with
    what she perceived to be China's complacency on the issue,
    movie-star-turned-UNICEF-goodwill-ambassado r Mia Farrow sent off a
    fuming op-ed piece to The Wall Street Journal in March. "These are
    the Genocide Olympics," she protested, in reference to the upcoming
    2008 Games in Beijing. "China is funding the first genocide of the
    third millennium."

    Smith College professor Eric Reeves, an activist who, together with
    Farrow, spearheaded the "shaming campaign" in which the Games are
    being branded as the "Genocide Olympics," says the Chinese will only
    be pressured to act in Darfur by appealing to its sense of national
    pride and honor and hitting them where it hurts most this year.

    "They need to choose between the lucrative relationship with Khartoum
    and having their coveted Games lumped in the collective consciousness
    with Nazi Germany's hosting of the Berlin Games in 1936," Mr. Reeves
    says. The idea, he adds, is not to boycott the Games - as that would
    only end up punishing innocent athletes and making China seem like
    a sympathetic victim - but rather to "hold China's feet to the fire."

    Soon, Steven Spielberg, who has signed on as one of the Beijing
    Olympics' "artistic advisers" found himself being drawn into the
    fray. Mr. Spielberg could "go down in history as the Leni Riefenstahl
    of the Beijing Games," Ms. Farrow had charged, referring to the German
    filmmaker considered by many a Nazi sympathizer and propagandist for
    those 1936 Olympics.

    America's favorite director quickly flew into action, shooting off
    a private letter to Chinese President Hu Jintao. "I add my voice to
    those who ask that China change its policy toward Sudan," he stated.

    "China is uniquely positioned ... and has considerable influence in
    the region that could lead efforts by the international community to
    bring an end to the human suffering there."

    A month later, in May, Congress jumped on the bandwagon when a group
    of 108 members sent a letter to the Chinese government warning that
    the Beijing Olympics could be endangered if China did not change its
    policies in Sudan.

    The National Basketball Association was not far behind. Led by
    Cleveland Cavaliers forward Ira Newble - who, on the road with
    the Cavs in March, had read a profile of Reeves in the newspaper -
    various players across the league united to create a "Dream Team
    of Conscience." The group soon released its own open letter to the
    Government of China and the International Olympic Committee:

    "We, as basketball players in the NBA and as potential athletes in the
    2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing, cannot look on with indifference
    to the massive human suffering and destruction that continue in the
    Darfur region of Sudan."

    Meanwhile, at a press conference last week, the Save Darfur coalition,
    together with Reeves, Farrow, Newble, and others announced the launch
    of a series of further actions to shame China, including a faux Olympic
    torch relay through countries that define the history of genocide. The
    relay will start on Aug. 8, 2007 on the Darfur-Chad border and travel
    through Rwanda, Armenia, Bosnia, Germany, and Cambodia. The relay
    will end in Hong Kong and will coincide with mass rallies at Chinese
    embassies around the world.

    China, in response, has denounced these efforts to link the games
    with its foreign policy, saying such a campaign runs counter to the
    Olympic spirit.

    "There are a handful of people who are trying to politicize the Olympic
    Games," Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi told reporters, stressing that the
    Games are a time to celebrate friendly ties between nations. "This
    is against the spirit of the Games. It also runs counter to the
    aspirations of all the people in the world."

    But protestations aside, it seems someone in Beijing is listening.

    Shortly after Farrow's op-ed appeared, China appointed a special envoy
    to Darfur and reportedly stepped up efforts to persuade Khartoum to
    accept international peacekeepers in Darfur.

    Pressure over the Olympics could help cause a shift from China's
    noninterference policy, says Reeves. "To date, what we've seen are
    largely cosmetic efforts, trying to 'respond to Darfur' on the cheap
    ... but as shame and dismay intensify, as the pain grows, we'll see
    a good deal more than cosmetics."
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