Steven Baxter

Patrolling the murkier waters of the mainstream media

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Syria: taking time off from the massacres to do some sport

No bans or boycotts in the Olympics.

Photograph: Getty Images
Photograph: Getty Images

As the Olympics loom, the eyes of the world turn to London.

But there's a real prospect that some of the cheering spectators could be those who have been responsible for some of the atrocities that have shocked the world. 

There's something sickening about the prospect of Syrian VIPs taking a hard-earned break in London from organising massacres in order to pose for grip-and-grin photos.

The horrifying images of the events in Houla and elsewhere won't go away. Nor should they. While Syria's athletes weren't responsible for those scenes, there is more than a whiff of suspicion that the state they represent may well have been.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) leapt out of the blocks to warn Britain that the nation state's powers were limited when it came to who it could and couldn't admit through its borders at the time of the supranational sports jamboree.

Priorities, priorities. Let's not spoil the party, let's not make waves. Don't mix sport and politics, they say.

But if anything could taint London's party, it would be the presence of those who brought about these crimes against humanity. Expelling diplomats is one thing, but how much of a message does that really send? 

As Londoners have already learned, whether it's VIP bus lanes or missiles on roofs, we don't have much of a say about what happens in our own country or city when the Olympic circus comes to visit: we just have to put up with it, smile and don't abuse the sacred logos.

These aren't 'our' Olympics. The torch may be being relayed around these islands, but we have no say in who can and who can't attend - be they nations who refuse to allow female athletes to compete at all, or nations responsible for death and destruction.

Elsewhere, the jailed oil tycoon Mikhael Khordokovsky has called for Russian officials to be barred from the attending the fun in London.

Whatever its relative merits, that plea is likely to be rejected, too. This is the post-boycott Olympic era: no bans, no boycotts, it's all about the sporting endeavour, we're led to believe.

Even if that is true, there's a real chance that 'our' Olympics could provide a backdrop for despicable regimes to obtain a sliver of legitimacy on the world stage by their presence in London. Perhaps that's a price worth paying for getting the event here at all; perhaps it isn't.

4 comments

hugh markey's picture

1936 and all that. Not only that but Jesse Owens winner of three(3) Olympic Golds went back to shoe-shining the footwear of more sedentary white US citizens by way of reward.
We've come a long way since then of course - via Iraq and Afghanistan - oh, and Libya. It's not a perfect world but let's not forget the Palestinians.

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GilRon's picture

Oh wow that's amazing Olympic time is the best time, since we got to see different types of competition. In which some may won some not. But overall very lovely experience.

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Silican's picture

Unfortunately, Mr Baxter, by your inability to answer you have demonstrated that you have the understanding of a dried out rock pool on the shores of imperialism and the morality of an intellectual filter feeder.

Silican's picture

Do you think then that the USA which continues to 'bugsplat' Pakistani, Yemeni and Somali families with its drones should be banned from attending the Olympics? Or do you have a threshold under which the numbers killed or method used is acceptable?
For the numbers of civilians (children or adults) and presumed enemies killed by Obama'a favourite toy see the Bureau of Investigative Journalism site.

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