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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
07.08.2008
TNR Q&A with Joey Cheek

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Just hours before Olympic gold medalist Joey Cheek was to depart for Beijing this week, the speed skater had his visa revoked. The official who called to notify him said China was "not required to give him a reason." Cheek's opinion of the Chinese government is no secret. He is president and co-founder of Team Darfur, a coalition of Olympic athletes trying to bring attention to the Sudan crisis. China, which has strong economic and energy ties to the African country, has been a primary target of the campaign. Beijing-based journalist Alex Pasternack spoke with Cheek on Thursday while he was in Washington, D.C.

Pasternack: How do you feel about all the attention you've received as a result of this?

Cheek: They gave me a visa, let me have it for a month, and then, 24 hours before my flight, they yanked it from me. It was kind of ridiculous and petty. And it speaks to a broader problem. They're so desperate to have the Games look like their version of a success that they would threaten anyone who says something they don't like. This is the story in general. It's not just about my visa. We've heard tales from other members of Team Darfur whose embassies have been approached by the Chinese. If they stay a part of the team, they'll be treated as suspect individuals, scrutinized, receive extra security, be threatened with heavy handed tactics. And this is all over. It's not just the Beijing officials, but the IOC [International Olympics Committee] and sponsors are being complicit in this. That's something that needs to be responded to. 

 

What form of protest do you think would be appropriate for athletes to undertake?

We've never advocated any athlete breaking any IOC rules or Chinese laws. As an athlete you have a great spotlight in which to highlight crises and need people to have that without breaking rules. But it's becoming increasingly evident that the rules don't really matter. They don't want you to mention anything. They're afraid that speaking out will tarnish this image that the world has of the Olympics. But it's a deeply ironic thing--their attempts to make this look perfect and happy come across as incredibly paranoid, and ends up having the opposite effect.


Would you advocate a more silent or implicit form of protest on the playing field or on the medal podium?

I think there are many ways of protesting. Every person is an individual, and most are going to be focused on athletic performance, because that's what you spent your life working toward. But I think you still have room within to speak your ideals. The athletes will be asked what they feel about it, and they'll be given a public forum. The ties between Sudan and China are real. And the crisis the people are suffering there goes against the ideals of the Olympics. There is a positive and constructive way to advance this discussion and protect those people. The killing is still going on.

 Click here for the full interview.

--The Editors 

Posted: Thursday, August 07, 2008 7:01 PM with 3 comment(s)

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maxblum13 said:

Joey Cheek is a hero.

August 7, 2008 10:21 PM

singlespeed said:

The minute the Chinese CP leaders say that the Olympics and politics don't mix is the moment when true hypocrisy reared it's dragon head. These 2008 Olympics have been anything but political for the CCP as a way to legitimize their version of free-market Communism as benign and posing no threat to the world. Much like the 1939 Olympics in Berlin were the opportunity to show the world how great the athletes were that came out of the Nazi party and to exhibit to the world that Hitler and his Nazi ruling party were benign and posed no threat to the world.

I'm not implying that China's current CP is similar to or even like the Nazi's were but that the heavy handed tactics against any criticism of the CCP and it's operations relating to the Olympics and issues not even related to the Olympics leads many to view the real reason for the CCPs zealousness as not simply national pride or athletic brotherhood but more simply as a way to legitimize their continued stranglehold on power and showing the Chinese peoples that the CCP is the only party they'll ever need and no amount of free-market green-washing, Olympic spectacle will obfuscate the matter.

That Joey Cheek has his visa revoked even for simply talking about Darfur speaks volumes to the paranoid nature of the CCP and its quest to silence any and all critics. The fact that Chinese leaders told Bush to basically "shut the fuck up" when he criticized the CCPs human rights records is another example of their hubris. Bush should have stayed home at that point. If the Chinese want to be accepted by the world then they have to be accepting of criticism as well. That's what it means to be on the world stage.

August 8, 2008 10:13 AM

psantillana said:

apparently Romney is coming to Cheek's defense, I just read at Andrew Sullivan's site. I'm too lazy to link, but you just type in andrewsullivan.com and it works.

August 8, 2008 10:51 AM