An Olympic Pull-Out

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The slogan of the 2008 Beijing Olympics is One World, One Dream. Yet while China and others attempt to deny or ignore nightmarish atrocities in Tibet, officially or unofficially, the 2008 Beijing Olympics are becoming increasingly boycotted.

On March 12, 2008, New York City Councilman and mayoral candidate Tony Avella, via the advocacy of Tom Weiss of UP FRONT News, introduced Council Resolution 1299, which cites the genocidal Chinese Communist occupation of Tibet and calls for the removal of the 2008 Olympic Games from Beijing. Aware that despite any legislative actions, the Chinese might go on with their Games, Resolution 1299 calls upon all U.S. corporations "to withdraw sponsorship or support" of the Beijing Olympics."

 

Here is Resolution 1299 in full, according to the U.S Tibet Committee website. It's currently offline, but cached on Google.

RESOLUTION 1299 - THE CITY COUNCIL OF NEW YORK
BY COUNCIL MEMBER AVELLA

Whereas, The People's Republic of China invaded the independent country of Tibet in 1949-50, and has committed "acts of genocide" according to the International Commission of Jurists; and

Whereas, On March 29, 2000, the New York City Council adopted Resolution No. 802, which recognized the sovereignty of Tibet (including the Tibet Autonomous Region and all Tibetan areas in Qinghai, Sichuan, Gansu and Yunnan Provinces) as an occupied country, stated that Tibetan people have the right to control their own economic development, and proclaimed that China should enter into good faith negotiations with representatives of the Tibetan government in exile; and

Whereas, The United States Congress has stated that Tibet, including those areas incorporated into the Chinese Provinces of Qinghai, Sichuan, Gansu and Yunnan, is an occupied country under the established principles of international law; and

Whereas, Between 1959 and 1965, the United Nations General Assembly passed Resolutions 1353 (XIV), 1723 (XVI) and 2079 (XX), calling for the cessation of practices which deprive the Tibetan people of their fundamental human rights and freedoms, including their right to self-determination; and

Whereas, In the past fifty years, China has engaged in systematic human rights violations in Tibet, including actions which constitute genocide or the attempted genocide of the Tibetan people, imprisoning and torturing hundreds of thousands of Tibetans, arresting arbitrarily, detaining without public trials, denying free speech and free press, and engaging in forced or coerced abortions and sterilizations of Tibetan women; and

Whereas, China has not complied with international law, including the International Covenant on Civil & Political Rights and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights; and

Whereas, In 2001, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) selected China to host the 2008 Summer Olympic Games; and Whereas, China promised to improve human rights conditions in China and Tibet and allow greater media freedom prior to the start of the Summer Olympics; and

Whereas, According to Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, China has not met its obligations to improve human rights in preparation for the Olympics, and human rights in both China and Tibet have actually deteriorated since China was designated as the Olympics host nation; and

Whereas, Reporters Without Borders has found that China has not allowed greater media freedom as promised, but in fact remains the world's largest prison for journalists; and

Whereas, In 2006, the United States State Department reported that serious human rights violations have occurred in Tibet, such as imprisonment and torture of political prisoners, denial of freedom of speech, religion and association, the forcing of monks and nuns to denounce His Holiness the Dalai Lama, and interference in the selection of Buddhist leaders, such as the Panchen Lama and Gendun Choekyi Nyima; and

Whereas, Other reports from human rights groups have found that China has forcibly resettled thousands of Tibetan nomads without their consent and without adequate compensation; and

Whereas, According to The Office of Tibet and Students for a Free Tibet, China continues to strip Tibet of its natural resources such as gold, copper, iron, timber, and minerals and transport these resources to China; and

Whereas, China has announced plans to divert important waterways from Tibet to China, such as the Yarlung Tsangpo River, which is causing severe environmental problems in Tibet and neighboring states; and

Whereas, The unrestricted influx of Chinese migrants to Tibet, often with government subsidies, is further marginalizing the Tibetan people, especially since the completion of the Gormo-Lhasa Railway, and threatens to make Tibetans a minority in their own homeland; and

Whereas, The IOC rejected Tibet's request to enter its team in the Summer 2008 Olympics; and

Whereas, Many American corporations with headquarters and operations in New York City sponsor the Olympic games and have financial dealings with China; and

Whereas, The rights of the Tibetan people in their struggle for human rights, economic justice and self-determination must be acknowledged and respected; now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED, That the Council of the City of New York calls for the removal of the 2008 Olympic Games from Beijing; and, be it further

RESOLVED, That the Council of the City of New York calls upon all American businesses and corporations who have their headquarters in New York City or do business in New York City to review their financial dealings with China to ensure compliance with international human rights standards, and to withdraw sponsorship or support of the 2008 Olympic Games if they are held in China.

 

 

 

Photo: Tibet Protest London by Carolincik, used via Creative Commons.

Comments

we are all in this together

perhaps we should deal with our own state sponsored genocide in the middle east before we point fingers at others.

I think we could be moving

I think we could be moving to a point where all of the injustices anywhere are treated as injustices everywhere, which might be a saving strategy in the face of the world's problems.  I don't think I have lost the right to be concerned about the fate of Tibetans, for example, because the American overlords I don't support are perpetrating wars I don't support. Why should we bind our compassion to the insides of these petty borders, when clearly everything else in the world  permeates those membranes?  Can't we just pick up the torch against injustice (I know,.. not punny), do what we can, when we can, for who we can, and go from there? 

we are, but we're running out of time

we do need to deal with our own state-sponsored genocide in the middle east, but not before we point our fingers at others; we have reached the point where this must all be done at one and the same time. 

 

 

disengage

AGREED!

Yes, what about the genocide of the Hopi in the US. And the treatment of other first nations peoples in he US and Canada. Perhaps we should look at this too. But my guess is we don't, because we'd have to make real changes. Nonetheless, the treatment of the Tibetans by the  Chinese is still deplorable.

Facing

We have to look at it all. We have to face it all. One situation is not necessarily more important than the other, but it difficult to talk about (and face) everything, everywhere, all the time.

Whether it's genocide and destruction of Tibet or Hopi or Lubicon or who or whatever, - it all boils down to the same thing.

The thing with Tibet is the immense opportunity to utilize The Beijing Olympics as contrast and counterpoint. Especially when the slogan is One World, One Dream. Kinda hard to live up to that and show the world this dream when your killing your neighbors etc etc etc

mirror

China gives America, or the West, an inconvienient and unpleasant mirror image of it's self.

Nothing New?

Olympics have seen boycotts in the past. Not so sure what everyone's afraid of in 2008.

From the Wikipedia Olympics article:

The 1956 Melbourne Olympics were the first Olympics that were boycotted, by the Netherlands, Spain, and Switzerland, because of the repression of the Hungarian Uprising by the Soviet Union; additionally, Cambodia, Egypt, Iraq, and Lebanon, boycotted the games due to the Suez Crisis.

Sixty-five nations refused to compete at the Moscow Olympics in 1980 because of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

Check your facts

I think here is a good place to start: http://discussions.pbs.org/viewtopic.pbs?t=68073&postdays=0&postorder=as... or go to Tibet and see it with your own eyes before you start to support any boycotting.