Beijing is aiming for global ascendancy – but its leader’s vision of world dominion is centralised, oppressive and totalitarian

The US describes its newly announced diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Winter Olympics, backed by Britain and other western countries, as a protest against China’s “egregious human rights abuses and atrocities in Xinjiang”, where the Chinese Communist party (CCP) is accused of genocide, as well as its evisceration of Hong Kong’s democracy.

Yet a separate, lurking worry informs Washington’s action: that China may turn the games into a propaganda extravaganza, showcasing its growing strength to a global audience. Think Gladiator, and then think Xi Jinping, China’s authoritarian president, acting like a latter-day Roman emperor exercising power over life and death.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Victorian architecture’s lost giant to regain rightful recognition

The designer of the glasshouses at Kew Gardens fell out of favour…

Harassment, hierarchies and discreetly rubbed trousers: the exhausting politics of orchestras

Cate Blanchett film Tár shows how damaging a maniacal conductor can be…

‘Addiction can be funny’: the standups tackling drugs, booze, psychosis and self-harm on stage

Rich Hardisty cut himself, Harriet Dyer numbed her pain with drugs. A…

UK households face record 54% energy bill rise as price cap is lifted

Move by Ofgem means millions likely to be driven into fuel poverty…