Current Affairs Olympic Watch urges athletes, politicians to “adopt” China’s prisoners of conscience
The eyes of the world are on Beijing where athletes have been arriving for the 2008 Olympic games due to begin this coming Friday. And as the opening ceremony nears human rights activists around the world are stepping up the pressure on the Chinese regime, demanding greater openness and the release of all prisoners of conscience.
On Friday Olympic Watch, a human rights organization set up in Prague in
2001, called on national Olympic teams to “adopt” China’s political
prisoners and find some way of expressing public support for them, such as
enquiring about their fate at press briefings, dedicating their medals to
them or even attempting to visit them in prison. Olympic Watch has
suggested that the Czech national team “adopt” the Tibetan spiritual
leader Tenzin Delek Rinpoche and that the Czech prime minister should
express public support for the Dalai Lama. The response to the appeal so
far has been cautious. Czech Olympic Committee spokesman Jan Martínek
said
that the committee would leave it up to individual athletes to decide
whether or not to express support for prisoners of conscience and in what
way. Although the Chinese regime has made a show of opening up to the
world
and has granted foreign journalists limited access to a number of banned
internet sites, it has issued thinly-veiled warnings to would-be
protesters. Three parks in Beijing have been marked out as possible
protest
venues but any protest must be announced well-in-advance and the Chinese
authorities reserve the right to ban any that are “in conflict with
China’s national interests”. As Czech journalists on the spot say,
there is no telling how the authorities in Beijing may decide to interpret
that phrase. Among the Czech politicians who will be traveling to China
are
Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek, who caused a stir by wearing a badge with
the Tibetan flag on his lapel when he announced his intention to attend
the
games, and Interior Minister Ivan Langer, neither of whom is going to
attend the opening ceremony. Neither has officially responded to the
appeal
by Olympic Watch.
Tibet, photo: www.amnesty.cz
However some Czech politicians feel that in view of the country’s
communist past, Czechs should be more active than other nations in support
of Chinese dissidents. Many have firmly refused to go to the Olympic
Games.
Green party ministers Ondřej Liška and Martin Bursík are among those
who
have signed a petition in support of human rights in China initiated by
spiritual and political authorities such as the former president Václav
Havel and Nobel Peace Prize winner Archbishop Desmond Tutu. They too have
added their voice to that of Olympic Watch, urging athletes to express
support for individual prisoners of conscience and pointing out that
speaking of human rights is not politics, as the Chinese regime would have
the world believe, but a moral duty.






