A good show is more important than all those people problems

China can’t hide the human rights violations and persecutions they are carrying out in order to devote the maximum impact marketing campaign to the Games. Nor do they care to.

It is estimated that at least 1.5 million people have been driven out of their homes, in order to demolish the houses and create grandiose, futuristic structures for the Olympics in Beijing and in the other cities that will host the games, like Shanghai, Qingda, Shenyang, and Qinhuangdao.  Hundreds of thousands have not received a replacement home or other damages, and have been reduced to poverty.  The non-governmental organisation Citizens’ Rights and Livelihood Watch (CRLW) denounces the actions in Beijing and in the district of Chaoyang, in the villages of Wali and Datun, where the local government has forcibly destroyed homes without just compensation, and the citizens have fought for their rights with denunciations’ and petitions addressed to the authorities.

And they got the Olympic Games.

CRLW recalls that about 200 residents have sent a joint petition to the government and have organised a month-long sit-in protest.  The reaction from the local authorities has been violent. Ma Jingxue, from Wali, who presented a petition for just compensation, has twice been sent to a labour re-education camp for a total of three years, for “rogue behaviour”.

Lu Qingcheng, of Datun, addressed a petition to the government asking for compensation for property losses and damages suffered during the compulsory demolition of his home.  He was imprisoned for eight days, and 20 residents who presented the petition together with him for “only” two days. 

One month before he was arrested in December for “subversion against the state”, human rights activist Hu Jia denounced the arrest of the brothers Ye Guozhu and Ye Guoqiang for having protested against the forced demolition of their houses. Ye Guozhu was tied to his bed and struck repeatedly, and is now awaiting the Olympic Games in the Chaobei prison in Tianjin.

And there’s more. In the name of this worldwide gathering honoring the excellence of human performance and the heights of the human spirit, the Chinese government has committed ongoing human rights violations.

In order to protect the image of clean and orderly cities, the government has stepped up the arrest and forcible removal of beggars and homeless, many of whom have been sent to labour camps.  Many people have been arrested simply because they have presented petitions to the central government. The ambulatory vendors have been driven away, or have suffered the confiscation of their goods.

How did China get these games? And why?

Can you recall a host country whose officials are less deserving?

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