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Big Brother versus YouTube: let the Beijing Games commence

16 July 2008
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Mark Leonard, Britain’s pre-eminent analyst of modern China, says the Olympic genie is out of the bottle. The prospect of global scrutiny has actually increased repression as the authorities try to stamp out dissent. But digital technology is impossible to police

‘For years we couldn’t wait for the Olympics to start. Now we can’t wait for them to be over.’ That is how a Chinese friend described the horrible limbo in Beijing as a control-freak state tries to anticipate and eliminate any possible challenges to its glorious coming-out party on the 8th of the 8th, 2008. It is clear to any visitor to the Chinese capital that while China hopes to clean up the medals tables, the sporting contest is at best a sideshow to the real Olympic competition — the battle to define how China is seen by its citizens and the world outside.

For the Chinese people the Olympics are the final proof that China has reclaimed its rightful place in the global premier league; putting behind it two centuries of humiliation at the hands of foreign invaders. For the world outside, the Games are meant to embody an official narrative of China as a ‘harmonious society’. The organisers had promised the trin-ity of a ‘green Olympics’, a ‘high-tech Olympics’ and a ‘people-centred Olympics’, designed to show off China as a beacon of economic prowess and modernity that has traded pariah status for global respectability. But as China ricochets from one PR disaster to the next — with stories about sweatshops combining with Tibet and Beijing’s choking pollution — the authorities are now trying to manage expectations downwards with a focus on the more modest goal of a ‘safe Olympics’, flooding the city and its environs with security forces primed to thwart potential terrorist attacks.

The Chinese Communist Party combines a laser-like focus on detail with awe-inspiring ambitions for the big picture. Where other Olympic cities like Athens or Sydney were kept desperately busy just completing building work on stadiums and transport links, Beijing’s concern extends from controlling the weather to micromanaging the behaviour of its citizens. Last year, when the Chinese government hosted the tenth anniversary of the Shanghai Co-operation Organisation — an alliance of autocrats which Beijing and Moscow have formed with five central Asian republics — the authorities treated the occasion as a dry run for the Games. They seeded clouds to prevent rain; sent police along the major streets removing washing lines and unseemly clutter; and declared a public holiday to decrease congestion. The organisers of the Olympics are going even further — wiping out entire neighbourhoods to accommodate Olympic buildings, closing factories to reduce pollution, running ‘public education campaigns’ against spitting, appointing 1,500 ‘civilised bus-riding supervisors’ and holding ‘queueing awareness days’. Visas for foreigners have been curtailed to stop human rights protesters from entering the country; Chinese activists imprisoned or kept under surveillance; security checkpoints set up on roads around Beijing; and foreign governments bullied to attend the opening ceremony (more on this later).

More articles from: Mark Leonard | this section

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Comments Post comment

Water

July 17th, 2008 10:21am Report this comment

An interesting article ahh, but I must really get away from this blasted computer.

T.O. Varich

July 17th, 2008 2:03pm Report this comment

"an American Renaissance under President Obama" - an example of the famous English irony, no?

Chris

July 17th, 2008 7:27pm Report this comment

Just another reminder of how rancid the whole olympic process is. Nobody with any moral fibre could take part in this - and all so a few drug fuelled plonkers can run round in circles.

Nicholas Storey

July 17th, 2008 11:34pm Report this comment

They bid for the games. They paid the piper - and now they and all the world - will hear his tune.

Kirk, Homewood ,IL USA

July 19th, 2008 12:11am Report this comment

"an American Renaissance under President Obama"- believe me, in this case, the clothes have no emperor.

signed,
a resident of barackistan (formerly, Illinois)

LuckyBarker

July 22nd, 2008 11:09am Report this comment

"Big Brother"... :)
This is about USA... ;)
Tapping phones, perlustration, daily propaganda, institutionalized torture, murder of Afghan and Iraqi civilians and other abomination...

Orwell wrote about the USA and described such propagation as in this clause ;)

fromRussiaWithLove

July 22nd, 2008 12:31pm Report this comment

Shanghai Co-operation Organisation — an alliance of autocrats which Beijing and Moscow ?
What next? UN terrorist organization?

jade louise lambeth

July 24th, 2008 2:42pm Report this comment

bb defo!!!!

jade lambeth

November 6th, 2008 10:40am Report this comment

big brother 4 lyf!!!!!!!!!

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