By Antonio C. Abaya
Written on April 7, 2008
For the Standard Today,
April 08 issue
While it is admitted here that the people of
Obviously there is no hope of turning
.
The on-going agitation in the name of a Free Tibet, timed specifically to coincide with the run-up to the 29th Summer Olympic Games in
This brouhaha has all the makings of an orchestrated demolition exercise, obviously manipulated and coordinated by some high-powered public relations outfit in
The idea is to make sure that CNN and the BBC and the rest of international media give the Free Tibet movement the attention that the publicists are being paid to promote.
I say this because contiguous to Tibet to the east is the Autonomous Region of Xinjiang, home to ethnic Uyghurs, who have been agitating for independence from China for decades – exploding bombs occasionally to remind the world that they are still fighting for a homeland – but no one pays any attention to them.
Why? Almost certainly because they have no publicist in New York or London or Paris coordinating their moves, and no Richard Gere or Mia Farrow to give their cause the Hollywood cachet that would compel liberals of the Western world to march out in their thousands to bash the Chinese.
There are actually more Uyghurs (about 15 million out of a total Xinjiang population of 19.5 million), than Tibetans (2.62 million in
And Xinjiang is actually bigger (636,000 sq. miles) than
I recall from my stamp-collecting years during my teens that there used to be a country called
East Turkestan was made up of Turkic-speaking peoples, all predominantly Muslim, spread out from what is now Xinjiang all the way to the Caspian Sea, near
Xinjiang itself underwent several permutations throughout its history. But Han Chinese control in the 20th century was reasserted with the entry of the recently victorious People’s Liberation Army in 1949 and its absorption as a special autonomous region in the People’s Republic in 1955.
So predominantly Muslin Xinjiang has at least as much claim to independence (from
Especially in the current environment of Islamophobia, few Western liberals will try to grab the Olympic torch as a protest against
It is unfortunate that the Olympics have been prostituted to politics. In 1956, some Western European countries boycotted the Melbourne Olympics to protest the Soviet suppression of the Hungarian uprising, and some Middle Eastern nations did the same to protest the British-French-Israeli seizure of the
In 1980, the Americans and some of their allies boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics to protest the 1979 Soviet invasion of
The Ancient Olympics, which ran for more than a thousand years from 776 BC to 393 AD, were held every four years among freemen in the Greek city-states and the Greek colonies in the Mediterranean and the
A refreshing exception was in 1964. I was a member of the Philippine Yachting Team (Dragon class) in the Tokyo Olympics then. Our venue was
As there were only about 20 countries in competition, our opening ceremonies included the raising of national flags and the playing of national anthems, which was not possible in the general opening ceremonies in
This was the first time that
The solution was Solomonic. East and West Germans competed as one national team The common national anthem that they chose was neither the Deutschland uber Alles of the capitalist West, nor the Internationale of the communist East, but the last movement of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, with the words from Schiller’s An die Freude (To Joy): Alle Menschen werden Brueder…..” (All mankind will be brothers…) *****
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