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A rally at the Chinese consulate in Los Angeles reiterates calls for a boycott of the Winter Olympics over the “Communist Party’s severe and worsening human rights abuses”. Photo: AFP

Beijing Olympic sponsors urged to speak up on human rights abuses in China

  • Human Rights Watch says sponsors risk ‘being associated with an Olympics tainted by censorship and repression’
  • It calls for an end to the silence from sponsors, which include Intel, Omega, Panasonic, Samsung, Toyota, Visa, Airbnb, Coca-Cola, Allianz and Alibaba
Corporate sponsors of February’s Beijing Winter Olympics must speak up on rights abuses in China or risk being tainted by association, Human Rights Watch said on Friday.

Preparations for the Games have been overshadowed by the Covid-19 pandemic and calls from rights groups for a partial or full boycott.

New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) is now urging sponsors, which include Intel, Omega, Panasonic, Samsung, Toyota, Visa, Airbnb, Coca-Cola, Allianz and Alibaba, to do more.

HRW said it wrote to sponsors earlier this year but received only one response.

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Global brands face backlash in China for rejecting Xinjiang cotton

Global brands face backlash in China for rejecting Xinjiang cotton

“There are just three months until the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, but corporate sponsors remain silent over how they are using their influence to address China’s appalling human rights record,” said Sophie Richardson, HRW’s China director.

She accused Games sponsors of “squandering the opportunity to show their commitment to human rights standards” and said they “risk instead being associated with an Olympics tainted by censorship and repression”.

The Olympic flame arrived in China last month after a lighting ceremony in Greece which was disrupted by a small number of activists who brandished a Tibetan flag and a banner saying “no genocide”.
Human rights campaigners and exiles have accused Beijing of religious repression against the Uygur minority in Xinjiang, as well as massively curtailing rights in Hong Kong and Tibet.

100 days out, is Beijing ready for the Winter Olympics?

Beijing has consistently railed against what it calls the “politicisation” of sport, while the International Olympic Committee says that it is not within its remit “to go into a country and tell them what to do”.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Call for sponsors to speak out on rights
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