Sports & Fitness

Holland won’t send diplomatic reps to Beijing Olympics

The Hague insists decision is due to Covid-19 and not ‘political boycott’

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 15 Jan 2022 3:00PM

Holland won’t send diplomatic reps to Beijing Olympics
Dutch Foreign Ministry spokesman Frits Kemperman says Covid-19 situation makes bilateral meetings between both governments difficult, which is why they've decided not to send diplomatic representatives to the Beijing Winter Olympics. - AFP Pic, January 15, 2022

THE HAGUE – The Netherlands will not send diplomatic representatives to the Beijing Winter Olympics because Covid-19 curbs will prevent talks with Chinese officials on human rights, the Dutch foreign ministry said yesterday.

But officials insisted that the move, which ministers decided on at a meeting yesterday, was not a political boycott of the sort already announced by the United States, Canada, Australia and Britain.

“We think that the severe Covid-19 measures will make it difficult to have meetings in China and a substantive programme of biliteral meetings with the host country,” Dutch Foreign Ministry spokesman Frits Kemperman told AFP:

“In these meetings we could talk about the worries on the human rights situation, as the Netherlands sees it, on a meaningful level with the authorities. So this is why the government concludes that we will not send an official delegation.”

Dutch athletes will still attend, with speed skaters Sven Kramer and Ireen Wust heading to Beijing to defend their Olympic titles.

Dutch King Willem-Alexander had already decided not to attend because the Covid-19 measures would prevent Dutch fans coming to the Olympics, Kemperman said.

The Netherlands similarly declined to send officials to the Tokyo 2021 summer games because of Covid-19 restrictions, he added.

A Dutch government source said it was “not a political boycott” and that there had been discussions with other EU countries that had also decided not to send an official delegation.

Denmark announced a similar move earlier yesterday.

Advocacy groups have backed the US-led effort, with Human Rights Watch’s China director Sophie Richardson calling it a “crucial step toward challenging the Chinese government’s crimes against humanity targeting Uyghurs and other Turkic communities.” – AFP, January 15, 2022

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