https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/02/the-china-you-wont-see-during-the-winter-olympics/
The Chinese Communist Party will do everything in its power to sanitize its atrocious human-rights record.
T he Chinese Communist Party — its international reputation having suffered a blow as a result of the Covid pandemic, its human-rights abuses, and its saber-rattling — hopes to score a massive propaganda victory in the coming weeks as thousands of athletes from 90 countries converge on Beijing for the 2022 Winter Olympics.
The Games, which will formally kick off with the opening ceremony today, are being held within a “closed loop” accessible to only 60,000 people amid stringent public-health measures.
China has reason to be confident in its ability to pull the wool over the eyes of the international community. Perpetration of mass atrocities were not enough to persuade the International Olympic Committee to move the event. The U.S. — in addition to the U.K., Canada, Australia, Lithuania, and a handful of others — is diplomatically boycotting but has stopped short of a hard boycott of the actual sporting events, and President Biden will still watch the Olympics. The 21 world leaders in Beijing for the opening ceremony today mostly represent different autocracies. (Vladimir Putin is among them, and the U.S. couldn’t persuade Poland’s president to bail.) Meanwhile, with billions of dollars in investments and corporate sponsorships at stake, there is a heavy incentive for many in the West to look the other way.
As with the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin and China’s previous hosting of the 2008 Olympics, the opening ceremony will serve a lot of pomp and circumstance to divert attention from military expansionism, totalitarianism, and oppression of minority groups.
The last time Beijing hosted, it took a bludgeon to human rights, with the Games taking place against the backdrop of an intensifying CCP campaign to crush Tibet’s independence movement and a crackdown on dissent in Beijing.
The human-rights situation within China has only deteriorated since 2008. The Olympics takes place with Xi Jinping on his way to a third term as the party’s general secretary. Beijing’s campaign to snuff out a distinct Tibetan identity and its efforts to silence dissidents have grown more dire over the past 14 years, with a recent report from the Tibet Action Institute revealing a yearslong policy by which some 80 percent of Tibetan children have been placed in boarding schools to assimilate them.
Add to that a number of other concerning events.
Starting in 2020, Beijing has all but eliminated Hong Kong’s autonomy and democracy with its imposition of a new national-security law. Effectively, the party criminalized any speech it deems to be dangerous — and claimed the ability to prosecute offenders anywhere in the world.