U.S. President George Bush is back in
Washington after representing the United States at the Beijing Olympics. Addressing human rights in Beijing last
Thursday, the president said America stands firm in opposing China’s detention
of dissidents, human rights advocates, and religious activists. On Sunday in meetings with Chinese President
Hu Jintao, Mr. Bush voiced U.S. concern over the situations in Sudan, Tibet,
Burma, Iran, and North Korea. Mr. Bush
says his discussions with President Hu on these issues are an ongoing process
and he does not need the Olympics to serve as a pretext for talking to the
Chinese about issues on which he says both countries are constantly
engaged.
The director of the Dream for
Darfur organization, Jill Savitt, was recently denied a visa to go to China to
attend the games. She says that exerting political pressure to get China
to curb its military support for Sudan’s war on Darfur involves more than just
presidential-level talks.
"I believe that if the United States government
wanted the genocide in Darfur to end, it would end…that the United States
government and the Chinese government are certainly the two most powerful
governments in the world, and it is hard for me to believe that if they wanted
Omar al-Bashir to stop killing his own people, that they couldn’t bring that
about. So, this is child’s play, what’s
going on right now, this bringing it up with the president, not bringing it up
with the president. None of these
leaders can say that they are anti-genocide leaders because they’re not," she
said.
For hosting a major world sporting event, says
Savitt, China does not need to justify its foreign policy and human rights
positions on every world crisis for which it comes under criticism. However, she notes that Beijing needs to be
confronted for its complicity and long reach in helping a rogue government to execute
a mass slaughter against hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians.
“I don’t think China is required to address every
conflict that’s going on in the world right now. I’m not asking China to intercede on Iraq or Afghanistan. China is paying for a genocide. It gives the government of Sudan $2 billion
a year, and that’s what the government uses to kill its own people, to buy the
guns and the planes, to hire the janjaweed. And then China also sells the weaponry that allows the government
to kill its own people. So this Olympic
host is complicit in the genocide. It’s
underwriting it. It’s the
financier. It’s the arms supplier. It is not playing a neutral role. And we are
pointing out the inconsistency of an Olympic host presenting itself as a leader
for peace, by being an Olympic host while being complicit in a genocide,” she
said.
In making the argument that without support from
China, Sudan would not be able to carry out its notorious campaign against
Darfur, Darfur activists hope that keeping up the pressure on Beijing during
and after the Olympics will summon up enough international outcry to get China
to stop boosting the Bashir regime.
Although the Chinese government denied
Savitt’s application for a visa to attend the 2008 games, the Dream for
Darfur director says she takes great satisfaction in working to end the Sudan
conflict through an internet campaign that can reach concerned citizens all
over the globe.
“Our protest has been online. We’ve been
broadcasting the Darfur Olympics. It’s
at darfurolympics.org It’s a daily webcast from [American actress]
Mia Farrow at a Darfur refugee camp, talking about different issues there. Today our topic is about the Olympics
itself. And she’s talked about what the
refugees think about the Olympics on our website,” she said.
The irony of darfurolympics.org’s
campaign, notes Savitt, is that Chinese authorities have blocked the netcast
from being received in Beijing because of tight restrictions placed on websites
in the hotels and communities where Chinese citizens and international guests
are staying over the next two weeks during Olympic festivities. Nevertheless, Jill Savitt says that when the
games are over, the pressure for Beijing to end its support for Sudan will be a
major project for diplomats at the United Nations, as China steps up to become
Chairman of the U.N. Security Council in the coming month.
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