Xi’s Olympic Guest List Is Mostly Leaders of Non-Democracies
- Australia, Canada, U.K. joined U.S. boycott over human rights
- Fewer democratic leaders attending compared with 2008 Games
Chinese President Xi Jinping will host 21 world leaders at the Winter Olympics, and a majority of them preside over non-democratic regimes.
Twelve of the leaders – including Russia’s Vladimir Putin, the most high-profile attendee – rule nations labeled either “authoritarian” or “hybrid regime” in the latest Economist Intelligence Unit Democracy Index. The organization rates nations by their electoral process, political participation and civil liberties.
Another eight head democracies and Monaco, which wasn’t rated by the EIU, is labeled “free” by U.S.-based Freedom House. The 2008 Olympics attracted a range of leaders from Western democracies, highlighted by former U.S. President George W. Bush’s presence in Beijing.
Fading Attraction
Fewer leaders are attending China’s showcase events.
A U.S.-led diplomatic boycott of this year’s Olympics over alleged human rights abuses in China’s western Xinjiang region – labeled genocide by the White House – has made attendance by heads of state deeply political. Beijing has struggled to manage the fallout, calling the genocide claims “vicious lies” and saying it didn’t plan to invite some “anti-China” politicians anyway.
China’s Foreign Ministry said it opposed the politicization of sports and vowed “to ensure the smooth holding of the Beijing Winter Olympics.”
“The Winter Olympics is a grand event for athletes around the world, and China has the confidence to present a simple, safe, and wonderful Olympic event,” the ministry said Wednesday in an emailed response to questions.
AUTHORITARIAN | HYBRID REGIME | DEMOCRACIES |
---|---|---|
Cambodia | Pakistan | Argentina |
Egypt | Kyrgyzstan | Ecuador |
Kazakhstan | Luxembourg | |
Qatar | Mongolia | |
Russia | Papua New Guinea | |
Saudi Arabia | Poland | |
Tajikistan | Serbia | |
Turkmenistan | Singapore | |
United Arab Emirates | ||
Uzbekistan |
Covid restrictions are partly to blame for the downturn in attendance from the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing, when China showcased its expanding economic prowess shortly before a housing crisis in the U.S. sparked a global financial crisis. Leaders from New Zealand, the Netherlands, Sweden, Austria, Latvia and North Korea have all cited the pandemic for their absence — even though the IOC had already suspended Pyongyang’s participation in events until the end of 2022 for ditching last summer’s Tokyo Games.
While Summer Games are always better attended, not least because most of Africa and South America don’t compete in the winter, several democracies that normally send leaders are absent this year, including Denmark, Norway and Finland. Pew Research Center surveys show attitudes toward China becoming less favorable in Western nations in recent years.
“The level of scrutiny on Beijing’s human rights record has changed dramatically since the 2008 Olympics and in democratic countries, in particular, public views of China are at record lows,” said Natasha Kassam, director of the Lowy Institute think tank’s public opinion and foreign policy program.
The countries with leaders attending account for 6% of global gross domestic product, according to calculations based on World Bank data. Leaders of developing economies who show up have a chance to sit down with Xi, as he resumes in-person diplomacy after a near two-year hiatus induced by China’s zero-tolerance Covid strategy.
Where’s The Money?
Countries sending their top leaders account for 6.3% of global GDP
Argentina President Alberto Fernandez is expected to ask China for an expansion of its bilateral currency swap in yuan while he’s in town. Five Central Asian countries announced their attendance in tandem with Beijing’s pledge of $500 million in aid and 50 million doses of Covid vaccines.
“The Winter Olympics guest list shows how the U.S. championing of values-based diplomacy combined with China’s wolf warrior diplomacy have weakened Beijing’s diplomatic outreach toward liberal democracies,” said Wen-Ti Sung, a lecturer in the Australian National University Taiwan studies program. The countries attending “have relatively less to lose diplomatically from not aligning with the U.S., and more to gain economically from attending the Olympics and getting into Beijing’s good graces.”
Author: Krystal Chia, Bloomberg