THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
October 15, 2021 at 13:20 JST
Medical personnel in protective suits attend to Lee Sihyeong of South Korea after he performed in the men’s short program competition at the Asian Open Figure Skating Trophy, a test event for the 2022 Winter Olympics, at the Capital Indoor Stadium in Beijing on Oct. 14. (AP Photo)
CANBERRA--International Olympic Committee Vice President John Coates says challenging China on its human rights record as Beijing prepares to host the 2022 Winter Games is “not in our remit.”
There has been widespread criticism of Beijing’s treatment of Uighur Muslims in the northwest China region of Xinjiang, which rights groups say amounts to genocide, as well as its crackdown on protesters in Hong Kong and its policies toward Tibet and Taiwan.
Coates, who is also president of the Australian Olympic Committee, said while human rights were an important part of the fundamental principles of the Olympics the IOC had to respect the sovereignty of the host country.
“The IOC’s remit is to ensure that there is no human rights abuses in respect of the conduct of the Games within the National Olympic Committee, or within the Olympic movement,” Coates told the National Press Club in Australia’s capital, Canberra, on Wednesday. “We have no ability to go into a country and tell them what to do.”
Coates said the IOC was “not a world government.”
“We have to respect the sovereignty of the countries who are hosting the Games,” Coates said. “The work the IOC is doing is to protect the Olympians and those involved in the Olympic (Games)--that’s within our remit.”
The Beijing Winter Games are scheduled to run from Feb. 4-20, with the Paralympics set to follow from March 4-13. The Chinese capital hosted the Summer Olympics in 2008.
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