Well isn’t this messed up. Joey Cheek, co-founder of Team Darfur, who participated in the conference call set up by the Afrosphere Action Coalition, has had his visa revoked by China
Former Olympic speedskater Joey Cheek had his visa revoked by Chinese authorities Wednesday, hours before he was set to travel to Beijing to promote his effort urging China to help make peace in the war-torn Darfur section of Sudan.
Cheek, the president and co-founder of a collection of Olympic athletes known as Team Darfur, was planning to spend about two weeks in China, when he received an unexpected call from authorities.
The 2006 American gold medalist said they told him they were denying him entrance into the country and were “not required to give a reason.”
“I didn’t see it coming,” Cheek said. “I figured once they gave me a visa, I wouldn’t imagine they wouldn’t allow me to come in later. That was a big shock. I wasn’t expecting to get a call the evening before I was leaving for Beijing.”
White House press secretary Dana Perino said the U.S. would protest China’s decision to deny the visa.
One of Cheek’s key initiatives was urging the international community to persuade Sudan to observe the ancient tradition of the Olympic truce during the Beijing Games.
It’s obvious what’s going on here. I don’t think you can be any more obvious.
Yep, this is pretty obvious. I doubt that the administration’s going to protest too strongly and will back down once again to China’s arrogant posturing.
It was a mistake from the get go to have China host the Olympics. They removed 1.5 million people from their homes without any opportunity for protest to hold these Olympics.
Friday is a day of all day protest for me! It’s my middle son’s birthday, they will recognize.
I really am glad to hook up on a whole new level.
Light and Love all the day long.
Danielle
Modern Musings
I’ve read that China is brutally beating and harassing Black people generally, because they have a very negatively color-aroused impression of Black people. For example, I read that Chinese police go into clubs and brutally beat and arrest Black people at random, believing that they must all be drug dealers or a bad element.
I’ve also read that the Chinese Government is discouraging businesses from employing Black people during the Olympics.
I know that I am not as anxious to visit China as I once was, after reading about these things. It seems like maybe they’re treating Black people as badly as the United States does.
@Danielle: Yep. I need to get a post up urging folks to boycott and protest Friday.
Now now. Get a hold on your thinking, folks. Of course yellow people look this way through the eyes of white supremacism. American sporting events are “politically neutral” but Oriental ones are “politically tinged” by the white lens. It’s called “Orientalism”.
Not that there aren’t serious problems to confront within China. I’ve lived in China, was born in the US, but refuse to pay homage to the US as the ultimate arbiter of justice, It seems to me that US citizens may want to first turn their attention to, say, stopping their nation from bombing and occupying faraway lands at the cost of hundreds of thousands of lives before getting into moralistic international brow-beating. And if you’re unable to get that done, you might consider being humble enough to ease up on the self-righteous stick-waving which just looks stupid when your money is dropping bombs on folks.
I’m not defending CCP policy. But I know what I’m talking about. I’ve lived in Szechuan, have hung out in Tibetan communities, have travelled through Tibet, have lived in Hong Kong. Those things help. What helps Americans? Only their ugly colonial Americanness.
Peace.
Just gotta say that I wholeheartedly think Kai’s comment is something that we all need to pay attention to. This, in particular, is important:
I agree with Kai that we, United States Citizens, definitely are not in the position to go around calling the kettle black unless we are also taking our own gov’t to task for their crimes and misdeeds. In fact, we need to be doing that first and foremost.
I hope that my post doesn’t come off as giving the US a pass on these matters because I’m not even trying to go there.
Hi Kevin, hehe no I don’t think you’re trying to go there. I’m just generally pissy at the moment at the manner in which China and Chinese people are discussed (and not discussed) in US media, and this annoyance spills over into these discussions on the matter. Sorry about that.
I guess there’s a philosophical question in the background here regarding the moral platform from which judgments and condemnations are launched. I would argue that none of us can claim universal stature as equal arbiters on all nations. Others might claim that they do indeed harbor a universal perspective. But I contend that we are soaked in the lens of our particular surroundings and that this lens colors everything we see and think about another country.
When it comes to China, the lens is deep and complicated, as are the interests pushing various angles.
In any case, I should stop derailing threads with my annoyance. The truth remains that the dealings between certain Chinese businesses and Darfur are incredibly dirty. I wish we could just say that without context and without worry, but you know how it is: such probings always spill over into more complex terrain.
Thanks for listening, bro.
Namaste.
@Kai: Don’t apologize for bringing up these issues here. This blog exists for that very reason. Keep bringing it, bro, like you do so well!
I’d say more, but I have to get ready for work now. So, more later tonight.
This is ridiculous. Even Adolph Hitler let Jesse Owens run!
We are all not necessary blinded by the beam in our own eye. One of my objectives in criticizing China on its human rights practices was for the purpose of China pointing back at the United States human rights violations.
Specially, the United States is guilty of violating the Right of the Child Soldier by incarcerating children from the age of 10 to 16 years of age, in the combat zones of Iraq and Afghanistan.
Secondly, the Chinese have the right to point out that the United States torture its captives, which is less harsh than the handling of Tibetan monk dissidents.
No, we have not forgotten about the human rights violations of female soldiers in the US military who have been raped and murdered like Pfc. LaVena Johnson.
Shining the light on human rights violations in one part of the world shines the light on travesties in other parts of the world.
Today, it is China. Not that China is the most brutal or inhumane regime, but because the spotlight is on China. In fact, the country begged for the 2008 Olympic global limelight. But, through its relationship with Sudan, China’s hands are bloody in Darfur.
We will not let oil companies like China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) and China Chemical and Petroleum Corporation (Sinopec Corp.) go unnoticed in its commercial dealing with the government of Sudan.
China buys Sudan’s oil from Gen. Omar al-Bashir, who came to power in a 1989 coup, and is held in power only by the weapons he buys from China to suppress dissidence and rebellion. The International Criminal Court gave notice of possible genocide in Sudan’s Darfur region. The ICC took steps to indict Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir for war crimes. The court’s chief prosecutor accused Mr. Bashir of masterminding a campaign of rape and murder targeting people in Sudan’s violence-wracked Darfur region.
Murder, rape, and pillage are being systematically carried out by Janjaweed militia, which has left over 300,000 Durfurians dead and 2,000,000 dislocated and homeless. A recent BBC report states that in a recent Janjaweed attack upon a convoy left six people dead and 28 wounded. So, we know that the atrocities continue.
The Christian Science Monitor makes the argument that Omar al-Bashir is actually stealing the oil from the people of Sudan, like a thug dictator who plunders his country’s treasury, and that China’s willful complicity is that of knowingly buying stolen and plundered goods. The Sudanese president has since defied the Big Eight and bullied the African Union into silence.
Today (8/8/08), the onus is on China.