Britain kow tows to China as athletes are forced to sign no criticism contracts

From The Daily Mail – British Olympic chiefs are to force athletes to sign a contract promising not to speak out about China’s appalling human rights record – or face being banned from travelling to Beijing.

The move – which raises the spectre of the order given to the England football team to give a Nazi salute in Berlin in 1938 – immediately provoked a storm of protest.

The controversial clause has been inserted into athletes’ contracts for the first time and forbids them from making any political comment about countries staging the Olympic Games.

It is contained in a 32-page document that will be presented to all those who reach the qualifying standard and are chosen for the team.

From the moment they sign up, the competitors – likely to include the Queen’s granddaughter Zara Phillips and world record holder Paula Radcliffe – will be effectively gagged from commenting on China’s politics, human rights abuses or illegal occupation of Tibet.

Prince Charles has already let it be known that he will not be going to China, even if he is invited by Games organisers.

His views on the Communist dictatorship are well known, after this newspaper revealed how he described China’s leaders as “appalling old waxworks” in a journal written after he attended the handover of Hong Kong. The Prince is also a long-time supporter of the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan leader.

Yesterday the British Olympic Association (BOA) confirmed to The Mail on Sunday that any athlete who refuses to sign the agreements will not be allowed to travel to Beijing.

Should a competitor agree to the clause but then speak their mind about China, they will be put on the next plane home.

The clause, in section 4 of the contract, simply states: “[Athletes] are not to comment on any politically sensitive issues.”

It then refers competitors to Section 51 of the International Olympic Committee charter, which “provides for no kind of demonstration, or political, religious or racial propaganda in the Olympic sites, venues or other areas”.

The BOA took the decision even though other countries – including the United States, Canada, Finland, and Australia – have pledged that their athletes would be free to speak about any issue concerning China.

To date, only New Zealand and Belgium have banned their athletes from giving political opinions while competing at the Games.

Simon Clegg, the BOA’s chief executive, said: “There are all sorts of organisations who would like athletes to use the Olympic Games as a vehicle to publicise their causes.

“I don’t believe that is in the interest of the team performance.

“As a team we are ambassadors of the country and we have to conform to an appropriate code of conduct.”

However, human rights campaigner Lord David Alton condemned the move as “making a mockery” of the right to free speech.

The controversial decision to award the Olympics to Beijing means this year’s Games have the potential to be the most politically charged since 1936.

Adolf Hitler used the Munich Games that year to glorify his Nazi regime, although his claims of Aryan superiority were undermined by black American athlete Jesse Owens winning four gold medals.

More recently, there was a mass boycott of the 1980 Games in Moscow in protest at the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.

But Colin Moynihan – now BOA chairman Lord Moynihan – defied Margaret Thatcher’s calls for British athletes to stay at home and won a silver medal as cox of the men’s eight rowing team.

Former Olympic rowing champion Matthew Pinsent has already criticised the Chinese authorities over the training methods used on children, which he regarded as tantamount to abuse.

Young gymnasts told him they were repeatedly beaten during training sessions.

Mr Clegg confirmed that such criticisms would be banned under the team’s code of conduct, which will be in force from when athletes are selected in July, until the end of the Games on August 24.

Mr Clegg said: “During the period of the contract, that sort of action would be in dispute with the team-member agreement.

“There are all sorts of sanctions that I can apply. I had to send a team member home in Sydney because they breached our sponsorship agreement and that is the first time it happened.

“I have to act in the interest of the whole British team, not one individual. No athlete is above being part of the team.

“There is a requirement on team members to sign the agreement. If athletes step out of line, action will have to be taken.”

Darren Campbell, Olympic relay gold winner at the 2004 Games in Athens, said the BOA’s move would “heap extra pressure on athletes”. But he added: “We are there to represent our country in sporting terms, just as our Army do when they go off to war. It is not supposed to be about politics.”

The BOA is taking a far more stringent stance than authorities in other countries. Australian Olympic Committee president John Coates said: “What we will be saying to the athletes is that it’s best to concentrate on your competitions.

“But they’re entitled to have their opinions and express them. They’re free to speak.”

Jouko Purontakanen, secretary general of the Finnish Olympic Committee, said: “We will not be issuing instructions on the matter. The freedom of expression is a basic right that cannot be limited.

“But the starting point is that we will go to Beijing to compete, not to talk politics.”

Political gestures have been made at previous Olympics, most famously in Mexico City in 1968 when black American 200m champion Tommie Smith and bronze medallist John Carlos raised their fists in a black power salute.

Both were suspended from the US Olympic team and barred from the Olympic village.

Forty years on, British athletes face similar sanctions if they highlight the abuse of human rights in China.

Last night Edward McMillan-Scott, Conservative MEP and the European Parliament vice-president, predicted a public outcry over the BOA’s move.

He said: “Foreign Secretary David Miliband is off to China soon. But before he gets on the plane, he and the rest of the Government should tell the BOA to take this clause out of the agreement.”

Potentially the contract means that a British athlete who witnesses someone being mistreated on the way to a stadium is forbidden from even speaking to their colleagues about it.

Competitors emailing home or writing blogs will also have to exercise self-censorship – or face having their Olympic dreams ruined.

Lord Alton said: “It is extraordinary to bar athletes from expressing an opinion about China’s human-rights record. About the only justification for participating in the Beijing Games is that it offers an opportunity to encourage more awareness about human rights.

“Imposing compulsory vows of silence is an affront to our athletes, and in China it will be viewed as acquiescence.

“Each year 8,000 executions take place in China, political and religious opinion is repressed, journalists are jailed and the internet and overseas broadcasts are heavily censored.

“For our athletes to be told that they may not make any comment makes a mockery of our own country’s belief in free speech.”

5 Comments

  1. BOA is holding a policy of ” You can go to 2008 Olympic but you will loose your freedom of speech”.
    It sounds like Chinese Communist Propaganda.

  2. We caught this story from you initially – and it seems like the BOA has issued a clarification (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7237599.stm), stating that it isn’t their intention to censor athletes. Whether that will be reflected in the final draft of the agreement is another matter of course, but it was just in case you missed their response. Of course regardless, it should be the individual athlete’s choice as to what and how they express themselves, especially if they see evidence of rights abuses.

    Cheers
    Robert at GUAI

  3. …and to confirm this is true, other media outlets are picking up the story. Here is the story from CNN

    http://www.cnn.com/2008/SPORT/02/10/olympics.britain/index.html?eref=rss_topstories

    LONDON, England (CNN) — British athletes selected for this year’s Olympic Games in Beijing will be asked to sign a contract that forbids them from criticizing China’s human rights record.

    British Olympic Association chief executive Clegg says the team must conform to an appropriate code of conduct.

    Graham Nathan, spokesman for the British Olympics Association (BOA), told CNN that “British athletes will have to sign a contract promising not to comment on any politically sensitive issues.”

    He added that they won’t go further than what is required by the International Olympic Committee charter which restricts demonstrations of political propaganda at an Olympic Games.

    Athletes who refuse to sign the agreement will not be allowed to travel to compete in the Games from August 8-24, according to a sunday newspaper report.

    British Olympic team members have long been required to sign a contract, but for the first time the commitment will include an undertaking not to comment on any politically sensitive issues.

    The document refers athletes to Section 51 of the IOC charter which “provides for no kind of demonstration, or political, religious or racial propaganda in the Olympic sites, venues or other areas.”

    Shadow culture secretary Jeremy Hunt hit out at the ruling, telling Sky News: “I think the BOA have been a little bit heavy-handed on this.

    “They, I think, have rather over-interpreted (the IOC charter) by making all our athletes sign this declaration.

    “I think that given America, Canada, Australia are explicitly saying that their athletes can say what they want when they go to Beijing, I think it is inappropriate to put this restriction on our athletes.”

    He added: “Our athletes when they go there must be allowed to say what they want. I think they have over-reacted and I think they have been perhaps a bit over-legalistic.”

    BOA chief executive Simon Clegg conceded that the Agreement might need to be amended to make its intentions clearer.

    “I accept that the interpretation of one part of the draft BOA’s Team Members Agreement appears to have gone beyond the provision of the Olympic Charter. This is not our intention nor is it our desire to restrict athletes’ freedom of speech and the final Agreement will reflect this,” he said in a statement.

    Clegg had told The Mail on Sunday: “There are all sorts of organisations who would like athletes to use the Olympic Games as a vehicle to publicise their causes.

    “I don’t believe that it is in the interests of the team performance. As a team we are the ambassadors of the country and we have to conform to an appropriate code of conduct.”

    The newspaper quotes Darren Campbell, British relay gold medalist at the 2004 Games in Athens saying that the BOA’s demand would “heap extra pressure on athletes.”

    But Campbell recognized: “We are there to represent our country in sporting terms, just as our army do when they go off to war. It is not supposed to be about politics.”

    Amnesty International campaigns director Tim Hancock told the Press Association: “People in China can’t speak out about human rights without fear of reprisals; people in Britain can.

    “It’s up to each individual to decide what they think and what they say about China’s human rights record and that goes for athletes too.

    “What is disappointing is the suppression of such legitimate views by the British Olympic Association. The Olympics were founded on the principle of human dignity and the respect for ethical principles.

    “In the spirit of human dignity, British athletes should be allowed to freely express their opinions without the risk or threat that they will be expelled from the Beijing 2008 Olympics team.”

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