Home

EU parliament vice president wants Olympic boycott

The Chinese government's crackdown on Falun Gong followers began in 1999The Chinese government's crackdown on Falun Gong followers began in 1999

Monday, 02, Jun 2008 12:00

China's "genocidal campaign of repression" against a popular religion should result in a boycott of the Beijing Olympic Games, a prominent European politician believes.

Edward McMillan-Scott, a Conservative MEP, says he believed the Chinese government was carrying out organ harvesting against those in its prisoners.

He cites research by UN for special rapporteur Manfred Novak that three-quarters of China's seven million detainees are Falun Gong followers.

The religion, which encourages forbearance, compassion and truthfulness, had 70 million followers by 1999 when Beijing launched its campaign against them.

Mr McMillan-Scott says it reflects wider failings within the Chinese government.

"The situation of human rights in China is so severe we need to go back to the 1936 situation where, had we known… the Olympics would not have taken place," he said at thinktank Policy Exchange in London.

"The Olympics are all about the human spirit. China specialises in crushing it."

Mr McMillan-Scott said the European parliament had pressed the International Olympic Committee for its public and private undertakings with China on human rights issues. It responded by saying it had no political standpoint on the issue, he said.

A sense that it was too late to take action against China grew during last week's Policy Exchange debate, which culminated when the speakers focused on the IOC's decision to award China the Games in 2001.

Heavy expectations were placed on China to improve its human rights record then, fundamentally linking sport and politics in a way which attracted criticism from the panel.

Norman Baker, Liberal Democrat frontbencher and president of the Tibet Society, said the IOC "has not done what it should have done – it should have been rather firmer than it has been".

And Mr McMillan-Scott added the IOC had made a "very political decision".

"Politics are in sport. The Chinese government asked what they want and they got it. That was public opinion," he added.


What do you think ?

Name 

Town/Country 

Your email 

Your comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

New jobs channel

The new look politics.co.uk now includes a jobs channel, where you can search for jobs and sign up for our jobs bulletin.

Newsletter

Sign up to politics.co.uk’s daily newsletter and you’ll never miss a key political story again

Public Affairs Jobs

Check out politics.co.uk's new jobs section, for government, public sector and public affairs roles.

politics.co.uk brings you a new monthly roundup of public affairs, government and local government appointments.

Current Vacancies:

Related News

Guantanamo Brit's plea to PM

A British resident facing the death penalty in Guantanamo Bay has made a last ditch plea to Gordon Brown to intervene in his case.

Mr Mohamed has been held without trial for six years

Related Analysis

Analysis: EU energy crisis and Britain

Opposition parties are hopping mad about the government's "complacency" on the European energy crisis. But with the headlines focused elsewhere they're not getting very far.

Insecurity in the pipeline

Latest Headlines

Interest rates reach historic low

The Bank of England has cut interest rates by 0.5 per cent, bringing them to their lowest level in the 315-year history of the central bank.

The Bank of England

Legislation

EC finance bill

This bill legally enabled the Own Resources Decision, which determines how member states finance the European Communities budget.

Issue briefs

International Monetary Fund

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is a multilateral financial institution, established in 1945 as a specialised agency of the United Nations.

Speakers Corner