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Home Articles Diaxde Volunteers Making Statements, Making Histories

Making Statements, Making Histories

The history of the Olympic Games is full of boycotts.  To call such actions “politicizing” the Games may not be fully accurate.  We at Tati Cultural and Educational Foundation and Taiwan February 28th Movement Net Radio would like to point out that many of these boycotts are justified.  They were carried out in order to make a statement about democracy and equality.  The ancient Greeks, who conceived the Olympics and who were also pioneers of democracy and democratic ideology, might actually be proud of such actions!

 

Examining the boycotts with the benefits of hindsight, some did make powerful, avant-garde statements.  For example, in the first Olympics to be boycotted, the 1956 Melbourne Game, the Netherlands, Spain, and Switzerland refused to participate in protest of the Soviet repression of Hungarian Uprising.  Who would have known that about three decades later, the US president Ronald Reagan would call the Soviet Union the “evil empire.”  And that the dissolution of USSR in 1991 would be celebrated by the whole world as the beginning of a new, peaceful era with the end of Cold War and flourishing of democracy and freedom in the Eastern Europe.

 

In the same year’s Olympics boycott, the world also witnessed the attempt to resist imperial rule and aggression.  Cambodia, Egypt, Iraq, and Lebanon also refused participating the Melbourne Game to protest joint military attack on Egypt, for the country’s decision to nationalize the Suez Canal after Britain and the United States withdrew their funding to build the Aswan Dam.  The four former French colonies’ resistance against the joint military attack carried out by Britain, France and Israel proved to be effective in ending the British and French imperialism in Middle East and Southeast Asia.  The Suez Crisis of 1956 turned out to be the last British military expedition abroad without the US assistance.

 

Then there is the African’s well-known struggle against Apartheid.  A large number of African countries threatened to boycott the 1972 and 1976 Games to force the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to ban South Africa, Rhodesia, and New Zealand.  Since then, the issue of racial equality gained further momentum, especially within the United States.

 

We, the Taiwanese people, certainly took our part in making a statement in the history of Olympic Games.  In resistance against PRC’s pressure to undermine our sovereignty, we boycotted the 1976 and 1980 Games.

 

In contrast to Richard Halloran’s article title (see Beijing Politicizing the Olympics), we, at Tati and the Taiwan February 28th Movement Net Radio, never see the aforementioned Olympic Games boycotts as politicizing or even political.  They are about human rights, about international peace, and about racial equality.  All are noble causes of humanity and well-accepted ideologies among civilized societies. 

 

My friends, we are making histories again.  In the face of a dominant, authoritarian regime, namely the People’s Republic of China, we, at Taiwan, is called to our historical duty to make strong statements against human rights oppression.  It is time to make strong, worthy, and noble statements.  We invite you to speak up against PRC and against the China-supplicant KMT administration in Taiwan at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .  Support democracy.  Support Taiwan’s sovereignty.  Support human rights in the Republic of Taiwan and the People’s Republic of China.



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Newsflash


President Tsai Ing-wen, left, yesterday at a 228 Incident memorial ceremony in Keelung presents Liu Chen-hsiung with a certificate restoring the reputation of his father, Liu Hsin-fu.
Photo: Tu Chien-jung, Taipei Times

The nation’s transitional justice efforts would soon reach a new milestone with the Cabinet taking over the responsibilities of the ad hoc Transitional Justice Commission, President Tsai Ing-wen (蔡英文) said yesterday during a 228 Incident memorial in Keelung.

During an address to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the 1947 Incident, Tsai said that the commission, established in 2018, would disband at the end of May after issuing its final report on human rights abuses under the then-Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) regime.