Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole is urging the federal government to join allies in a diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Winter Olympics, citing ongoing Chinese human rights violations.
In a press conference on Monday, O’Toole acknowledged questions about a boycott are challenging given the hard work and training put in by Canadian athletes hoping to wear the maple leaf in competition.
“They should also wear our values abroad as well,” O’Toole said, noting he has been speaking over the course of months with athletes planning to compete to understand the effects on them.
“This is an important question and it’s something I’ve struggled with,” he added, describing a diplomatic boycott as the best option right now.
“I think that’s the best thing we can do alongside our allies to show pressure but not make the athletes pay the price.”
NDP foreign affairs critic Heather McPherson also voiced her support for a diplomatic boycott.
She pointed to the decision by Beijing in March 2021 to impose bans on several Canadian MPs who had worked on a subcommittee report issued in October 2020 which concluded China’s persecution of the Uyghur ethnic minority group constitutes a genocide.
“That means that if we did send a diplomatic mission, China in fact is choosing who gets to go on that mission … that, in and of itself, to me is problematic,” said McPherson, who is among those banned.
READ MORE: Vote passes recognizing China’s treatment of Uyghurs as genocide
She also pointed to the vote in the House of Commons in February 2021 in which MPs affirmed the recognition of a genocide taking place by the Chinese government against the Uyghurs.
That motion passed unchallenged, with 266 voting in favour and the Liberal cabinet abstaining.
There were no votes against it.
“I think we need to send a message to Beijing that the world is watching, the world is paying attention, and we are not going to allow this to go unchallenged,” McPherson concluded.
All eyes are on the Biden administration this week amid reports the American government is planning to announce a diplomatic boycott of the Games, meaning it would send no government officials.
Participating countries typically send official representatives of the government to Olympic ceremonies.
For example, former Canadian governor general David Johnson attended the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for six days as the country’s official representative.
But China is facing growing global pressure over its persecution of the Uyghurs, its crushing of internal dissent — including in Hong Kong — and the arbitrary detentions of two Canadians, who have since been released, in what was widely viewed as a hostage-taking.
READ MORE: Peng Shuai: Women’s tennis tour suspends China events over concerns
As well, the regime’s disregard and aggression towards the rules-based international order have sharpened concerns among a growing number of countries about the need to come together to challenge Beijing’s conduct publicly.
Added into the mix are international fears for the wellbeing of tennis star Peng Shuai, who disappeared from public view last month after she alleged that a high-ranking Chinese official had sexually assaulted her.
Concerns about her safety have since led the Women’s Tennis Association to suspend tournaments in China.
A spokesperson for Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly said on Monday that the question of whether to implement a diplomatic boycott is something Canada is still discussing with the U.S.
“Canada remains deeply disturbed by the troubling reports of human rights violations in China,” said press secretary Syrine Khoury in an email.
“We will continue to discuss this matter with our closest partner.”
More to come.
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