The World Uyghur Congress (WUC), the largest overseas Uyghur organization, has urged the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to reconsider its decision to hold the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing in light of the human rights situation in China’s Xinjiang region.
In a formal complaint to the IOC’s Ethics Commission, the WUC said the IOC had “acted in breach of the Olympic Charter by failing to reconsider holding the 2022 Olympics in Beijing following verifiable evidence of genocide and crimes against humanity taking place against the Uyghur and other Turkic Muslims by the People’s Republic of China.”
“We hope that the Ethics Committee will engage with the issue we have put before them and call for the 2022 Olympic to be moved if international crimes continue to be carried out against the Uyghurs,” said Michael Polak, a London-based lawyer who prepared the WUC’s submission.
But the IOC responded by saying it “must remain neutral on all global political issues.”
It had “received assurances” from Beijing that “the principles of the Olympic Charter will be respected in the context of the Games,” the IOC said in a statement emailed to The Epoch Times.
But WUC President Dolkun Isa said, “The IOC can no longer claim ignorance of China’s genocide against the Uyghur people.”
“If the International Olympic Committee allows the Chinese government to host the 2022 Winter Olympics, it will go down as a historically shameful decision,” he said.
The WUC said it had submitted to the IOC evidence of crimes against humanity taking place in Xinjiang, such as mass sterilization, arbitrary detention in internment camps, torture, repressive security and surveillance, and forced labor and slavery.
Holding the Olympic Games in Beijing would “be seen as support for the extreme repression suffered by the Uyghur and other Turkic Muslims,” the group said in a statement.
Also, the group said, the IOC may even be “directly involved” in crimes against Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims, as it will be impossible to ensure the products used for Olympic merchandise are not tainted by slave labor, given the opaque nature of the supply chains in China.