Tag Archives: Olympics

Biden not expected to attend Beijing Olympics as White House leans toward diplomatic boycott

Democratic and Republican lawmakers, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, have advocated for a diplomatic boycott in protest of China’s human rights abuses. Some Republicans have even suggested no American athletes attend either, but the official said a full boycott is unlikely right now.

The topic of the Olympics and Biden’s attendance did not come up during his three-and-a-half hour meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping Monday night.

On Tuesday, Biden was asked whether there would be a US delegation to the Beijing Olympics. The President — who had his back turned when the question was asked — replied: “I’m the delegation and I dealt with it.”

However, White House deputy press secretary Chris Meagher clarified on Wednesday that “the President was not providing an update in his answer last night.”

Last week, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the US and allies are in “active conversations” about how to approach the upcoming Winter Olympics in China.

Blinken, appearing virtually at the New York Times DealBook Summit, was asked whether he thinks American athletes should participate since he has said in the past that China is involved in genocide, given its policies toward Uyghur Muslims in Xinjiang province.

“We are talking to, to allies, to partners, to countries around the world about how they’re thinking about the games, how they’re thinking about participation,” Blinken said. “It’s an active conversation. We’re coming, we’re coming up on the games, but let me leave it at that for today.”

The games are set to begin on February 4 in Beijing and last until February 20. When asked what date the deadline is for the US and other countries to make a decision, Blinken sidestepped.

“Well, let’s see,” he said. “The games are coming up, when, in February, early in the year, so before then.”

Biden and Xi’s virtual summit — seen as some of the most critical diplomatic talks of Biden’s presidency — yielded no significant breakthroughs. However, it served as an auspicious restart to relations following significant deterioration during the final year of the Trump administration and continued hostility into the Biden administration, including when US and Chinese diplomats traded barbs during a March summit in Alaska.

Throughout this week’s virtual summit, the leaders engaged in a “healthy debate,” according to a senior Biden administration official present for the discussions.

Biden raised concerns about human rights, Chinese aggression toward Taiwan and trade issues.

Nearly every major issue Biden is focused on — including addressing supply chain issues, climate change, North Korea and Iran — has a nexus to China. And the two countries, which have the world’s two largest economies, remain in disputes over trade, military aggression, global infrastructure, public health and human rights.

Biden has long argued that democracies can deliver more effectively than autocracies like China, and he’s used his now-passed infrastructure package to show domestically how political parties in democracies can work together. On a more global scale, he’s also forged international infrastructure agreements intended to compete with China’s Belt and Road initiative.

Xi, meanwhile, cemented his consolidation of power last week when the Chinese Communist Party adopted a landmark resolution elevating him in stature to his two most powerful predecessors — Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping. He is attempting to seek an unprecedented third term in power at the 20th Party Congress next fall.

This story has been updated with additional reporting.

CNN’s Kevin Liptak contributed to this report.

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China Will Create ‘Closed-Loop’ Bubble for Winter Olympics

The International Olympic Committee on Wednesday released a preliminary set of health protocols for the upcoming Winter Games in Beijing that suggested that the next Olympics, set to start on Feb. 4, could be the most extraordinarily restricted large-scale sporting event since the start of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Beijing Olympic and Paralympic Games will take place in what organizers called a “closed-loop management system,” a bubblelike environment in which athletes, officials, broadcasters, journalists and a large Games work force will be forced to eat, sleep, work and compete, without leaving, from the day they arrive to the moment they depart.

Anyone, including athletes, intending to enter this bubble has two choices: Arrive in China fully vaccinated or prepare to spend the first 21 days in Beijing in solitary quarantine.

And while spectators will be allowed to return to competition venues after being largely barred from the recent Summer Games in Tokyo, entry will be limited to those residing in mainland China.

A more detailed plan for the Games is set to be released in late October, but it is already clear that Beijing Olympic organizers and the Chinese government will attempt to implement a level of control — of close to 3,000 athletes, as well as several thousand more Games participants, including international journalists, volunteers and venue staff members — beyond anything seen before at the Games.

Organizers of Beijing 2022 presented these initial protocols to the I.O.C. executive board on Wednesday. The I.O.C., in a statement, offered its full support for the restrictions.

Considering the common objective of delivering a safe Games, it said, “the I.O.C. and I.P.C. fully respect the principles established by Beijing 2022.”

The Summer Olympics in Tokyo featured a far more porous health protocol. Participants were not required to be vaccinated, nor sequestered if they were not, and while they were asked to try to remain within Games-affiliated venues, they were still afforded plenty of opportunities to interact with the outside world, including at convenience stores and local restaurants for takeout meals. Members of the local news media and the venue work forces in Tokyo, meanwhile, were allowed to commute to Olympic venues from their homes. And after a 14-day period of more harsh restrictions, all visitors to the Games were given the freedom to move about the city as they wished.

The so-called closed-loop management system planned in China, the I.O.C. said, would encompass “all Games-related areas, including arrival and departure, transport, accommodation, catering, competitions, and the Opening and Closing Ceremonies.”

The I.O.C. statement suggested that no one inside the system would be allowed to venture out of it for any reason: “Within the closed loop, participants will be allowed to move only between Games-related venues for training, competitions and work. A dedicated Games transport system will be put in place.”

Those within the bubble also will be subject to daily coronavirus testing.

Beijing 2022’s vaccination requirement — or its almost unthinkable alternative of three weeks alone in quarantine for athletes on the eve of the Games — also represents an unprecedented step during this pandemic. No major sports league in the world has a mandate that all competitors be vaccinated, or face a similar multiweek isolation period, most likely without access to training, before being allowed to compete. The I.O.C. on Wednesday said that all vaccines recognized by the World Health Organization would be accepted and that athletes who asked for medical exemptions would have their individual cases “considered.”

Many prominent athletes around the world remain unvaccinated, and it remains to be seen how many potential Olympians will decide to skip the Beijing Games or subject themselves to a three-week quarantine rather than accept vaccination in order to gain access to the Games. Athletes from the United States already face their own vaccine mandate: Last week, the United States Olympics and Paralympic Committee announced that all of its athletes would be required to be vaccinated by Dec. 1 if they hoped to represent the delegation next year in China.

In another departure from the Tokyo Games, where fans were banned altogether, spectators will be allowed at competition venues in Beijing in some capacity. But, according to the I.O.C., tickets will be limited to those residing in mainland China “who meet the requirements of the COVID-19 countermeasures.” The specifics of those requirements, the organization said, were still under discussion.

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Tokyo Admits Covered-Up COVID Case Was Olympic Visitor

TOKYO—The first case of the deadly Lambda variant of the coronavirus identified in Japan—and then kept under wraps—was a woman who had come to the country to work at the Tokyo Olympics, The Daily Beast has confirmed.

She arrived at Tokyo’s Haneda Airport on July 20, with an Olympic Accreditation Card, according to several sources. Although she was positively identified as carrying the Lambda variant on July 23—the same day the Olympics opened—the Ministry of Health did not announce that finding until Aug. 6, after reporters from The Daily Beast first broke the story. This most recent news of the patient’s identity has caused an uproar in Japan, where many speculate the government sat on the findings to ensure that the Games, which were opposed by over 60 percent of the public, went on as planned.

Earlier this week, a representative of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) apologized on a television news program for the government’s failure to promptly announce the findings—and offered a remarkable excuse: “We would’ve said something if the media had asked us earlier.”

Friday marked the first time since the pandemic began that Japan had over 20,000 new cases of the coronavirus in a single day, with Tokyo setting a new record by exceeding 5,770 in a day. Before, during, and after the Olympics, experts expressed concerns that the Games would worsen Japan’s pandemic, and possibly introduce newer and more infectious variants into the country. The lack of disclosure by the government so far has made people worried that the worst may have already happened.

What We Know

The woman in her thirties, who is Japan’s first known case of the Lambda variant to enter the country, arrived at Haneda International Airport in Tokyo on July 20. At the quarantine checkpoint, she tested positive for the coronavirus and was isolated. Before coming to Japan, she was living in Peru, where the variant, feared to be more contagious and more resistant to vaccines than other strains, was first detected. Japan’s National Institute of Infectious Diseases (NIID) suspected, correctly, that she might have the Lambda variant—which at the time accounted for 80 percent of new cases in Peru. They confirmed their suspicions after analysis on July 23, the day the Olympics opened.

It was a bad omen of things to come.

The NIID submitted a report to the Ministry of Health the same day researchers made their determination. The viral RNA of the variant was completely sequenced and released to an international influenza and virus database, GISAID, on July 26. A GISAID representative wrote in an email to The Daily Beast that it was “a very fast turnaround time by Japan’s National Institute of Infectious Diseases.”

The Ministry of Health had no plans to announce the findings during the Olympics but has claimed that it was not a cover-up, insisting the Lambda variant did not meet internal criteria for a public announcement. An employee working for the NIID told The Daily Beast, on the condition of anonymity, that there should have been an announcement after identification, due to the seriousness of the Lambda variant.

“I can only speculate on why the ministry decided to say nothing. I’m a scientist not a bureaucrat. But in light of what we know now, it seems even more likely that the Olympics were a factor,” the individual said.

The brewing scandal over the failure to inform the public about the discovery of the variant has put Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) on the defensive. The prioritization of the Olympics over public safety is seen by many as a factor in the current COVID-19 explosion. While the Olympics were certainly not the cause of the blaze, they undeniably fueled the fire, sending out the message that the surge of infections was not of great concern.

The opening day ceremonies, which had no regular spectators, also may have turned into a super-spreader event, as thousands gathered outside the Olympic stadium to watch the fireworks, hear the music, and enjoy the visual displays.

Damage Control

On Aug. 12, a high-ranking member of the Liberal Democratic Party, Masahisa Sato, appeared on Japan’s TBS feature news program Houdou 1930 to speak on the government’s response to the Lambda variant. “We should have released the information early on, however, information was not properly shared within the government. [The reason the Ministry of Health released information on the Lambda variant on Aug. 6] was because of questions from the press,” Sato said regarding the time gap between knowing the Lambda variant had been found in the country and the release of that information to the public.

When asked whether the Lambda case was not disclosed due to the Olympics, Sato did not directly answer the question—and instead threw the Ministry of Health under the bus. “I get the feeling if the NIID had been asked questions earlier, they’d have answered quickly. There wasn’t a great awareness of the Lambda variant. But if it was spotted at the airport quarantine, they should have announced it. All of us connected to the Cabinet Secretariat share the same opinion,” he said.

Sato also pointed out that the variant had not yet been found in the wild, adding, “The NIID has now designated Lambda as a variant to be watched.”

The Lambda variant is designated as a “Variant of Interest” by Japan’s National Institute of Infectious Disease, as opposed to a “Variant of Concern,” like the Delta virus. With a viral load nearly 1,000 times higher than the original strain of COVID-19, it can also infect vaccinated individuals. The VOI category is assigned to variants of COVID-19 that have features that may increase the transmissibility and the severity of the disease.

Professor Tetsuya Matsumoto from the International University of Health and Welfare in the Department of Public Health, appeared on the program with Sato, as a medical expert. He stated, “The Lambda variant has already begun spreading from its central hub in South America. Such a variant entering Japan should have been promptly reported, and as the number of Delta cases continue to rise, Lambda is the next thing that ought to be prepared for. As it [the initial discovery] was around the time of the Olympics, you can’t blame anyone for thinking there wasn’t some motive to not disclose the information sooner.”

After the bubble has burst

The Tokyo Olympics were supposed to be conducted in a “safety bubble” to ensure that cross-contamination between athletes, volunteers, IOC members, and the general public wouldn’t take place. In reality, that bubble was as thin as a Made-in-Japan Sagami condom, but without the same level of sturdiness. The Tokyo Olympics Organizing Committee has on a regular basis announced the number of COVID-19 cases connected to the Games, but with a minimal amount of detail. So far, they have disclosed 553 known cases, but they have not specified the nationality of the individuals, nor what type of coronavirus they were infected with. It is not even clear if positive cases were analyzed to see what variant had infected the individuals. The Organizing Committee did not respond to a request for clarification as to whether the woman from Peru was actually included in the 553 announced cases.

Doctors had warned about the COVID-19 risks associated with the Tokyo Olympics months before the Games began. Dr. Naoto Ueyama, chair of Japan Doctors Union, said in a late-May press conference to the Foreign Correspondents Club of Japan that the tournament could distribute existing variants and behave as a petri dish for new, potentially more fatal mutations.

“And if that were to happen, the number of victims indeed would be on a number even unthinkable in a conventional war,” Ueyama said.

Japan is currently struggling in the relentless grip of its fifth and largest wave of COVID-19 infections. A record breaking 20,365 new cases were reported nationally on Aug. 13. Tokyo had over 5,700 cases. Hospitals are being forced to discharge patients early to treat as many people as possible. Over 10,000 people are self-medicating at home waiting for a hospital bed and some have already died. The International Olympic Committee, Prime Minister Suga, and Tamayo Marukawa, the Olympic minister, have denied any link between the Olympics and Japan’s coronavirus surge.

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NBC Tokyo Olympics ratings ‘faceplanted,’ finishes with smallest Summer Games audience in network history

NBC’s coverage of the Tokyo Olympics finished as the lowest-rated summer games in the network’s history. 

NBC’s primetime coverage of the Tokyo Olympics averaged 15.5 million primetime viewers. The total is the smallest audience for the Summer Games since the network began airing them in 1988, according to the Wall Street Journal, which added that the event saw a 42% drop since the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016. 

NBC HAS 33-YEAR LOW VIEWERSHIP FOR TOKYO OLYMPICS OPENING CEREMONY: ‘NOT A HAPPY’ BENCHMARK

NBC’s primetime coverage of the Tokyo Olympics averaged 15.5 million primetime viewers. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

Outkick media columnist Bobby Burack feels sports are about passion and fandom but “American viewers no longer share those emotions toward the Olympics” after years of fans bickering about athletes getting political.

U.S. Olympic hammer thrower Gwen Berry arguably set the tone during the medal ceremony at her trials when she turned her back on the American flag as the national anthem played. The move caused outrage by some would-be viewers, but Berry maintained she represents “oppressed people” tuning in to the games. Other athletes kneeled in an attempt for force social change on the world stage, further angering some viewers. 

“Here’s the problem: the Left is ashamed of what America represents, and the Right is ashamed of the athletes’ divisive portrayal of the country,” Burack told Fox News. “Combine the two, and neither side cares if Team USA takes gold, silver, or gets humiliated.”

However, a lack of American spirit was hardly the only thing plaguing the Tokyo Olympics. 

NBC Sports chairman Pete Bevacqua said the network was “thrown a series of curveballs over the last 18 months” as the coronavirus pandemic delayed the games by a year, forcing the Olympics to go on in empty stadiums and initiate widely criticized protocols. In addition, a variety of high-profile athletes had to bow out after testing positive. 

CLAY TRAVIS: USUAL OLYMPICS EXCITEMENT UNDERCUT BY MEDIA ATTACKS ON AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM

Potential viewers also complained about events being hard to find on an assortment of viewing options, confusion about streaming service Peacock, and a significant time difference causing major events to air on tape delay during an era when mobile alerts and social media make spoilers inevitable. 

Sports business reporter Darren Rovell covered the 2008 Beijing and 2010 Vancouver Olympics for CNBC. His current gig as Action Network senior executive producer put him in a situation where he wanted to consume the games as a fan, but Rovell feels NBC made it difficult by putting an emphasis on streaming service Peacock instead of regular TV. 

ESPN WRITER TROUBLED BY AMERICAN FLAG AT OLYMPICS: ‘I KEEP THINKING BACK ON THE CAPITOL RIOTS’

“I don’t think NBC helped itself out,” Rovell told Fox News. “Obviously they wanted to drive people to Peacock, I think that didn’t work.” 

Rovell said NBC did a “horrendous job” driving people to linear television. 

“They just weren’t great about telling you what’s on when. And that has no excuse … If you wanted to watch [an event], a lot of people didn’t even know when it was on, which to me doesn’t make sense,” Rovell said. 

He said the time difference was another clear issue during the age of modern technology, as he was told by CNBC in 2008 that fireworks behind a live shot should be ignored because the network hadn’t aired the tape-delayed Opening Ceremonies yet. 

“That was OK 13 years ago, it’s not OK now,” Rovell said, noting that NBC continued to air events hours after they occurred. 

“I think in the last five years, since 2016, things in general are now unavoidable. You cannot avoid something once a Bleacher Report or anyone who gets into the feeds, which are sometimes like involuntary or inadvertent based on what you subscribe to. In the last five years, they’re unavoidable,” Rovell said. 

CLAY TRAVIS: TOKYO OLYMPICS PLAGUED BY ‘GENUINE LACK OF AMERICAN SPIRIT’

Media mogul Bill Simmons blasted NBC when he tried to watch coverage of men’s basketball.  

“They’re showing it at weird hours, after the games end they don’t have replays of the game, you have to basically search for the game and hope there is a clip on there, and then like about seven hours later they’ll show a seven-minute recap of the game,” Simmons said on his podcast. 

“How can they f—k this up? How hard is this? There are so many basketball fans,” Simmons added. “It’s 2021, how do we screw this up?”  

Others complained the games lacked star power and gymnastics legend Simone Biles pulling out of most of her scheduled events didn’t help matters. The Wall Street Journal reported that some disappointed Olympic advertisers have been offered additional commercial time “to make up for the shortfall compared with the audience size NBC had promised,” which is a common practice in the industry when ratings underwhelm. 

“Some ad buyers said they might look for a discount on ads in the Super Bowl or a slot in the Beijing Winter Games, which are set to start on Feb. 4, to resolve contractual issues,” the Journal reported. 

The opening ceremony drew 16.7 million viewers for NBC on Friday, the smallest audience for the network broadcast since the 1988 Seoul Games. On Sunday, the closing ceremonies averaged 8.8 million viewers to also finish as the least-watched ever.

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NBC has remained publicly upbeat despite the disappointing viewership, circulating a press release touting the record 7,000-plus hours of coverage it made available, the closing ceremonies winning Sunday night and Peacock, which is still relatively new, having its best two-week period ever. 

Deadline senior editor and TV critic Dominic Patten wrote that NBC’s Olympics “faceplanted” and mocked the network’s positive spin. 

“NBC likely will never admit it, but the Comcast-owned network must be so relieved that the Tokyo Olympics is finally over,” Patten wrote, noting that NBC boasting about ratings wins over shows such as CBS’ “Big Brother” aren’t exactly what advertisers expected. 

“That’s not a lot to write home about — from Tokyo or otherwise,” he wrote. 

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Russia Melts Down, Claims U.S. Rigged Olympics to Steal Our Golds

Russia’s decades-long dominance in rhythmic gymnastics was shattered at this year’s Tokyo Olympics, where Russian athletes failed to win the Olympic gold in the individual all-around event for the first time since 1996. In Sunday’s group competition, Russia didn’t win gold either, losing to Bulgaria.

Since authoritarian countries cherish Olympic competitions as a tool to inflame nationalist sentiments and promote their countries’ global standing, Russia’s defeats were loudly rejected by a host of pro-Kremlin voices—who resorted to state media’s time-honored tradition of conspiracy-mongering.

Experts on Russian state television have been trying to read each country’s Olympic gold medals as tea leaves, suggesting that the outcome determines the new global hegemon. Last week, pro-Kremlin pundits, hosts, and experts relished the idea of the “weakened” United States being edged out by China. The host of the state TV show 60 Minutes, Olga Skabeeva, pontificated: “You can’t beat China. They have the most gold medals.” Eager to inject Russia’s notorious transphobic rhetoric into the conversation, Skabeeva added: “And none of them are transgenders, so they will keep procreating.”

To Russia’s dismay, the United States ultimately surpassed China, winning 39 gold medals and 113 medals overall—the most in the world. And that means, according to Russian state TV’s logic, that the U.S. is not relinquishing its global leadership—which does not sit well with Russia.

“Tokyo Olympics are the clearest example of total Russophobia. These Olympic Games stink. Global sports forever ceased being an honest competition, turning into a cheap political farce,” Skabeeva raged on Monday’s broadcast of 60 Minutes. She baselessly alleged: “At the behest of Americans, the International Olympic Committee took away two gold medals from Russia.”

Lawmaker Aleksei Zhuravlyov described other countries competing in the Tokyo Games as “a pack of Russophobic beasts, headed by the United States.” “Americans are freaks. Moral freaks. Why are we even discussing this parade of freaks and perverts?” asked Pyotr Tolstoy, deputy speaker of the Russian State Duma.

Oleg Matveychev, a member of the Russian Expert Institute for Social Research, claimed that Olympic judges’ decisions had been swayed by Russophobic propaganda.

“The medal of the Israeli sportswoman is worthless, she should throw it out,” he said, referring to Linoy Ashram’s win over Russian Dina Averina in the rhythmic gymnastics all-around competition—which the Russian team asked to be overturned. “She hung shame around her neck.” He proceeded to assert that American Olympic victories are “worthless” and likewise are “achieved by cheating,” calling for all U.S. athletes to be allowed to compete only in the Paralympics, because so many of them are “sick.”

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Chernyshenko told TASS on Sunday that the Russian Olympic Committee sent a request to the International Gymnastics Federation about judging in the rhythmic gymnastics. Accusing the judges of being biased, Chernyshenko said: “Naturally, we will not leave unaddressed situations when politics were above objective and fair appraisal of performances of Russian athletes.”

Appearing on state TV channel Rossiya-24, the president of the Russian Rhythmic Gymnastics Federation, Irina Viner-Usmanova, claimed: “During these Olympic Games, for the first time in history there has been such horror and mayhem… This outcome was planned in advance.” She added that the decision was supposedly made “not based on the performance and not based on results, but based on the desired outcome.” Viner-Usmanova described the judging of the Olympic event in question as “obscene.”

On her Telegram account, Foreign Affairs Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova explained Russia’s losses by alleging that “Russophobic bastards” could not allow Russia to win and therefore “resorted to fraud in front of the entire world.” Appearing on Monday’s broadcast of 60 Minutes, Zakharova claimed that Russia’s victories and achievements are being usurped by its opponents. “Global sports are in danger,” she complained, bellyaching about “gross injustice” perpetrated against Russian athletes in Tokyo.

RT’s editor-in-chief, Margarita Simonyan, was so upset with the judges of the gymnastics competition that she tweeted: “After the slaughter of our gymnasts by judges from different countries, I really regret not working for the GRU.” GRU, Russia’s military intelligence agency, is known to specialize in sabotage and assassinations and was reportedly responsible for the attempted assassination of ex-double agent Sergei Skripal in the English city of Salisbury in 2018.

Russia’s overblown reaction has no basis in reality. The main complaint against the gold medal victory of Israel’s Ashram is that she dropped her ribbon during the last exercise, with Russian sports figures and commentators claiming that such a mess-up would have made it impossible for her to win. However, Averina, the Russian silver medalist in Tokyo, won gold at the 2018 world championship despite the fact that she had dropped her ribbon, beating none other than Ashram into silver. This year, Ashram’s routine exceeded Averina’s in its level of difficulty, with cumulative points securing her victory—even after the deduction for her error.

Disregarding the facts, the head of state-funded RT, Simonyan, described the Olympic judges as “beasts,” posted their names on her Twitter account, and called for the Russians in Tokyo to spit at their backs. Simonyan insisted that Ashram can “remain a human being” only if she returns the gold medal. As a result of the vicious smear campaign waged by Moscow, Ashram’s social media pages have been flooded by hateful comments from resentful Russians.

Aside from wounded pride, Russia’s accusations of rigged Olympics serve another important political agenda: nurturing the narrative of fortress under siege to promote national unity.

Appearing on Monday’s 60 Minutes, Professor Oleg Barabanov of the Russian Academy of Sciences explicitly articulated this approach: “I read a lot of comments on sports forums to decipher public opinions on various topics. I was amazed how unanimously our country supported Dina and [twin sister] Arina Averina in this unfair judging… The biggest outcome is that our entire country saw and understood that there is an ongoing anti-Russian campaign, that we are encircled by the ring of enemies… not only according to the tales of TV propagandists, but in real life. From this point of view, those judges who misjudged Dina Averina did a big, useful thing for the consolidation of Russian society.”



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Barbie condemned after releasing ‘inclusive’ Tokyo Olympics collection without visible Asian representation

Mattel, the toy company that manufactures Barbie dolls, collaborated with the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and Tokyo 2020 organizers to release a new line of dolls in February 2020 specially designed for the Games.

The collection includes five dolls that reflect the five new sports that had been added to the Olympic program this year — baseball/softball, sport climbing, karate, skateboarding and surfing.

“Tokyo 2020 is a monumental event that brings the world together through sport and inspires fans of all ages,” Mattel Chief Franchise Officer Janet Hsu wrote in a Mattel press statement. “The Mattel Tokyo 2020 Collection honors these sports and inspires a new generation through the Olympic spirit and outstanding athletic tradition.”

Despite an attempt to “[highlight] inclusivity and innovation,” many were quick to note the absence of an Asian Barbie during its repromotion last month.

People took to social media platforms, including Twitter and Instagram, to express disappointment in Mattel for their excluding an Asian doll, regardless of whether it was accidental or intentional.

“I won’t be buying Barbie dolls for my two girls. No representation whatsoever,” Michigan Macomb County Commissioner Mai Xiong, who immigrated to the United States as a Hmong refugee at the age of three, tweeted.
Numerous users also questioned how Mattel could allegedly forget to include a visibly Asian Barbie with the Games being hosted in Tokyo — a widely recognized Asian city — and with several Asian American Pacific Islanders (AAPIs) making headlines after winning medals for Team USA, including Sunisa Lee, the first Hmong-American to compete for the US, who made history as the first Asian — of any nationality — to win gold in the gymnastics individual all-around.
“Mattel renders #AsianAmericans invisible while touting ‘most diverse doll line yet,’ highlighting an Asian country, featuring #Barbie in Japanese karate uniform, [and] branding each doll ‘Tokyo official,'” Japanese American visual artist Drue Kataoka tweeted.
Diversified Barbie dolls have proven to be quite popular. Weeks prior to the Tokyo Olympics opening ceremony, Barbie released a doll modeled on Japanese tennis player Naomi Osaka as part of the Barbie Role Model series. The doll sold out just hours after being released.

CNN has reached out to Mattel for comment.



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Tokyo Deliberately Left Deadly New Lambda COVID Variant Out of Press Briefings During Olympics

On July 20, three days before the Olympics began, a woman in her 30s from Peru tested positive for COVID-19 at Haneda Airport in Tokyo and was immediately flagged as a probable carrier of the highly infectious Lambda variant of COVID-19.

However, The Daily Beast has learned that Japan’s Ministry of Health, after making a conclusive determination on the identity of the variant, omitted any mention of the new case from its regular press releases on July 30 and Aug. 6.

The passenger’s samples were promptly sequenced and submitted to an international influenza virus database as a Lambda variant on July 26. But Japan’s Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare deliberately left the information out of its press briefings and releases, according to employees of the ministry who spoke with The Daily Beast; we also obtained documents released to the Japanese media. The variant, first detected in Peru in December 2020, is highly infectious and potentially resistant to vaccines.

The Aug. 6 press briefing.

Ministry of Health, Welfare, and Labor

“We worked around the clock to make the call and sound the alarm, and the Ministry kept quiet—and had no intentions of announcing until today—when the minister of health had his scheduled press conference,” an employee of Japan’s National Institute of Infectious Diseases (NIID) told The Daily Beast on the condition of anonymity. Norihisa Tamura, the current minister, regularly briefs members of the ministry press club on relevant issues. The discovery of new COVID-19 variants in Japan is typically announced at a press conference.

According to the NIID employee, since early July, Japan had been strengthening its ability to detect variants at all airports in the country. On July 17, the Lambda variant was placed on a watch list due to concerns from preliminary scientific reports that the variant could be highly transmissible and possibly vaccine resistant. On July 20, when the passenger from Peru tested positive for COVID-19, alarm bells went off.

“In Peru, close to 90 percent of all new COVID-19 cases are due to the Lambda variant,” the employee said. “When the sample came and we knew where the woman was from, logically we were already looking for the Lambda variant and expected to find it.”

The lab work on the samples obtained from the traveler at the airport was made a top priority and by July 25, the results were conclusive. On July 26, three days into the Olympics, the genome sequence of the detected Lambda variant was submitted to GISAID, an international database of influenza viruses including SARS-Cov-2 variants.

GISAID, in response to queries from The Daily Beast, confirmed in an email, “[The] sequence has been submitted to GISAID on July 26 which indicates a very fast turnaround time by Japan’s National Institute of Infectious Diseases.”

“Well, it’s nice to see GISAID recognize our fast turnaround, but I wonder why we rushed when the information was just going to be held back until a convenient time. We are scientists, not politicians, so I can only speculate on the reasons,” the NIID source said.

The Daily Beast reporters working on this story first published an article on the discovery of the Lambda variant in Japan, on Aug. 6, at 12:06 a.m. Japan time. The Ministry of Health issued an announcement to the press on the morning of Aug. 6 listing all the COVID-19 variants detected in Japan at airport quarantine centers. But the press release only highlighted the detection of the Alpha and Delta variant from international travelers. Furthermore, the list of dates including passenger information begins from July 21, the day after the Lambda variant was detected, completely omitting the variant from the timely report.

There is no mention of a female traveler in her 30s residing in Peru testing positive for COVID-19 at Haneda. The reports on the findings of variants at Japan’s airports are released on a nearly weekly basis. A subsequent report released on July 30 also omitted any mention of the Lambda variant being discovered.

The Ministry of Health only publicly admitted to finding the Lambda variant on the evening of Aug. 6, after repeated inquiries from The Daily Beast. The ministry has asserted that since the individual carrying the variant was spotted and isolated at the airport, the variant has not “landed” in the country.

Japan’s Ministry of Health has a long history of cover-ups and altering data to suit the needs of the ruling administration.

In the 1980s, the ministry suppressed reports that unheated blood products were transmitting AIDS to hemophilia patients and did not urge the use of safe alternative products that were readily available. The courts found that the reports were suppressed to benefit a Japanese pharmaceutical company, and former ministry officials involved in the scandal were convicted of criminal negligence resulting in injury and death in 2000.

Most recently, in 2018, as then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, of the Liberal Democratic Party, was pushing forward a labor reform bill, ministry officials submitted falsified data to the Japanese parliament, which supported Abe’s assertions that discretionary labor would benefit workers. Some of the work data compiled by the Ministry of Health showed employees working more than 24 hours in a single day. The government had to retract the data, and several ministry officials were disciplined. A senior secretary of the prime minister had met with ministry officials around the period that the data was tampered with.

The Ministry of Health had not yet replied to questions from The Daily Beast at the time of publication.

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As the Tokyo Olympics ends, all eyes are now on the Beijing Winter Games

In addition, the build up to the event will be set against the backdrop of a worsening pandemic and lingering questions over Beijing’s alleged mishandling of the initial outbreak.

Having successfully contained the spread of the virus, China is now grappling with its worst outbreak in more than a year, with the highly contagious Delta variant spreading to half of its provinces. The last thing Chinese leaders will want to see is the Winter Olympics turning into a superspreader event.

Speaking to CNN, Jin Dongyan, a virologist at the University of Hong Kong, said the success of the Tokyo Olympics shows that with careful planning and strict safety measures, holding an international sports event during the pandemic is “completely feasible.”

The 2022 Winter Games will be spread over three main areas — in the capital Beijing, as well as Yanqing and Zhangjiakou to its northwest — connected by high-speed rail.

Jin suggested Beijing could draw on the experience of the Tokyo organizers, in creating a bubble around the key Olympic sites, to prevent Covid-19 from spreading.

During the Olympics, Tokyo was under a state of emergency and reporting thousands of cases every day. But inside the Olympic bubble, only a small number of people were infected — with about 400 Games-related cases recorded since July 1.

But while the Tokyo Games went to great lengths to protect athletes from catching Covid-19, Beijing will likely want to prevent the coronavirus from spreading outwards, from the Olympic bubble into local communities.

For more than a year, China has relied on a harsh “zero tolerance” strategy to swiftly stamp out domestic flare-ups. It has also closed its borders to most foreigners. Those few who are allowed to enter are required to undergo two to three weeks of mandatory hotel quarantine.

The reopening for the country’s borders for the first time in two years, even in a limited capacity, will therefore pose a massive logistical challenge, not least in terms of housing the athletes.

Jin, the expert at Hong Kong University, said the current lengthy quarantine requirement was unsustainable for the Olympics, as few athletes would be willing to be trapped in a hotel room for three weeks prior to their events.

There is also the uncertainty of live audiences. The Tokyo Games banned foreign as well as local spectators. But the International Olympic Committee said last month the Beijing Games would need spectators to be successful.

“We need and we want to have spectators … We want to have the opportunity for everybody to enjoy the hospitality and enjoy the great Chinese offers,” said Juan Antonio Samaranch Jr., head of the IOC’s coordination commission.
Last week, an expert at the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention told the state-run Global Times many events at the Beijing Winter Games will be held outdoors, making it possible for domestic audiences to attend, though it is not clear if spectators will be subject to additional quarantine measures.

If Beijing does allow domestic spectators, will they too be required to live temporarily within the Olympic bubble — and how might Beijing facilitate sealing off tens of thousands of people, potentially for several weeks?

Despite the significant uncertainty surrounding such questions, public anticipation for the Winter Games is already running high in China. During the closing ceremony of the Tokyo Games on Sunday, hashtags about the Beijing Olympics were among the top trending topics on Weibo, China’s strictly censored version of Twitter, drawing hundreds of millions of views.

“The stadiums are so high-end and magnificent. Hope the pandemic ends soon so that I can go to see the game in person,” one comment said.
“Covid-19 will become like flu in the future and we can’t always close the country’s gate. China hasn’t hosted a winter Olympics and this is a particularly precious opportunity to show our comprehensive national strength,” read another.

Others, however, are concerned about the spread of Covid-19 through the Games, as well as the strict travel restrictions that are likely to be put in place.

“Have we forgotten how many of our countrymen died because of Covid-19? Why do we have to take on the risk for the whole country? There will be all kinds of restrictions going into Beijing…how many working-class people will have their lives affected?” one commentator wrote.

Partly as a result of the “zero Covid” strategy, China’s public tolerance towards infections remains extremely low. In recent weeks, some prominent Chinese public health experts have called for a switch of approach for the country to learn to coexist with the coronavirus, following the path increasingly taken by other countries with relatively high vaccination rates.

On Sunday, however, China’s former health minister published a commentary in party mouthpiece People’s Daily attacking the idea of “coexisting with the virus,” potentially suggesting official resistance to the approach.

In the article, Gao Qiang, the former minister, accused the United States and the United Kingdom of “disregarding people’s health and safety” and causing a resurgence of outbreaks by relaxing Covid restrictions.

“This is a failure of epidemic prevention decision making caused by the defects in the political systems of countries like the US and the UK, as well as an inevitable result of their promotion of individualistic values,” wrote Gao.

Photo of the Day

A new 88,000-square-meter (947,224-square-foot) terminal opened at Lhasa Gonggar Airport in Tibet on Saturday. The airport is Tibet’s largest aviation hub, as well as one of the highest airports in the world. The new terminal is expected to “significantly boost passenger and cargo transport” and help the vast Himalayan region become a “global logistics hub for South Asia,” the state-owned Global Times reported.

The risky loophole Chinese companies have been using for years

The Didi IPO debacle is shining a spotlight on a complicated investing structure used by many Chinese companies that list in the United States.
The concept is called a variable interest entity, or VIE, and it’s popular among Chinese firms that want to raise money from foreign investors.

How does it work? A VIE uses two entities. The first is a shell company based somewhere outside China, usually the Cayman Islands. The second is a Chinese company that holds the licenses needed to do business in the country. The two entities are connected via a series of contracts.

That means when foreign investors buy shares in a company that uses a VIE, they’re purchasing stock in the foreign shell company — not the business in China.

Didi uses this structure, along with several other major firms, including Alibaba, Pinduoduo and JD.com. The arrangement is explained in Didi’s prospectus, but not everyone is aware.

Chinese firms have been using the structure for decades because foreign investors are not really allowed to own stakes in local firms in industries including tech. Still, Chinese companies want to raise money abroad.

Creating an offshore holding company that goes public helps Chinese companies get around those rules. Wall Street and US regulators have long been cool with the arrangement, which gives American investors easy exposure to dynamic companies that are powering the world’s second largest economy.

But there are huge risks. First, it’s not clear that the contracts that entitle foreign investors to the economic benefits produced by Chinese companies are enforceable. It’s also not clear whether VIEs are legal under Chinese law.

Here’s what Didi says about the arrangement: Didi says in its prospectus that its legal counsel believes that its VIE “is not in violation of mandatory provisions of applicable PRC [Chinese] laws,” and that its contracts are “valid and binding.”

But it also included a warning to potential investors.

“We have been further advised by our PRC legal counsel that there are substantial uncertainties regarding the interpretation and application of current or future PRC laws and regulations,” Didi cautioned. “The PRC government may ultimately take a view contrary to the opinion of our PRC legal counsel.”

Think about the problem this way: Chinese companies are essentially telling Beijing that they are 100% owned by Chinese citizens. Meanwhile, the same companies are telling foreign shareholders that they’re the real owners.

Now, there are signs that both Chinese and US regulators are becoming uncomfortable with VIEs. Investors, beware.

Read more on CNN Business.

— By Charles Riley

Around Asia

  • A Trump-era policy intended to guard against espionage by shutting out top Chinese students from leading US research universities could be hurting America more than Beijing.
  • The Taliban has seized control of Kunduz in northern Afghanistan, the first major city to fall to the insurgent group after a string of victories following the withdrawal of foreign collation forces.
  • The beheading of a diplomat’s daughter in Pakistan looks set to test a legal system activists say has repeatedly failed victims of violence and needs urgent reform.
  • The Indonesian army hinted that it will end its mandatory “virginity test” for female recruits. The tests have been described as “abusive, unscientific, and discriminatory” by human rights groups.

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US rolls to women’s hoops gold medal in Bird’s last Olympics

SAITAMA, Japan (AP) — Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi walked off the basketball court together, arm-in-arm, one last time at the Tokyo Games.

They started their journey together five Olympics ago and ended it in the same fashion as always — with gold medals hanging around their necks.

“All of what we’ve done for USA Basketball, we’ve done together. It’s fitting,” Bird said after the 90-75 win over Japan on Sunday.

And now it’s over — at least for the 40-year-old Bird.

“The best comparison is college since you know it’s the end,” Bird said. “Now I always have a wonderful feeling and a great taste in my mouth my senior year. That’s how it is with USA Basketball.”

All she and Taurasi have done on the international stage is win and now the pair stands alone with five gold medals — the first basketball players ever to accomplish that feat.

“It’s 20 years and people only get to see these moments,” Taurasi said. “We’re on these trips every day together. every conversation. this means a lot to us.”

While Bird is retiring from international basketball, Taurasi left the door open after the game in her on-court interview that she’ll play in Paris in 2024.

She isn’t actually certain she’ll play, saying: “We’ll see.”

But, Bird threw a quick jab at her 39-year-old friend for even considering it.

“Hahaha, idiot,” Bird said laughing while standing next to Taurasi and talking with The Associated Press.

The U.S. has now won the last seven Olympic gold medals matching the country’s men’s program for the most ever in a row. The men did it from 1936-68.

With Bird orchestrating the flow of games and Taurasi’s scoring, they have been a constant force for the U.S., providing stability for the women’s program since the 2004 Athens Games. They have won all 38 of the games at the Olympics they’ve competed in.

The names have changed around the pair, including greats Lisa Leslie, Sheryl Swoopes, Tina Thompson, Tamika Catchings and Sylvia Fowles, but the results haven’t.

The Americans are on a 55-game Olympic winning streak dating back to the bronze medal game of the 1992 Barcelona Games.

The U.S. let Japan know that wasn’t going to change on Sunday.

The Americans jumped out to a 18-5 lead behind a dominant first quarter by Brittney Griner. The team lead 23-14 after one as Griner had 10 points, taking advantage of the undersized Japanese team. Japan was able to get within six in the second quarter before the Americans went up 11 at the half and never looked back.

As the final buzzer sounded, Bird and Taurasi embraced and then proceeded to hug all of their teammates and the coaching staff.

Griner finished with 30 points, making 14 of her 18 shots. It was the most points ever by a U.S. player in a gold medal game, surpassing the 29 by Leslie in 1996.

While Bird has said she is moving on, the future is bright for the U.S. behind Griner, Breanna Stewart and the six newcomers on this year’s team. That included A’ja Wilson, who will be counted on to keep the streak going three years from now at the 2024 Paris Games. Wilson, who celebrated her 25th birthday on Sunday, made her presence felt in her Olympic debut, scoring 19 points in the gold medal game.

But there were other milestones of note Sunday besides Bird’s farewell.

The victory also made Dawn Staley, the first Black women’s basketball coach for the U.S., the second woman to win a gold medal as a player, assistant and head coach joining Anne Donovan. Staley said after the game that she won’t come back to coach in Paris.

Staley said being part of six Olympics is enough for her, “I’m full.”

The game also marked the end of Carol Callan’s run as the national team director. She started right before the Americans won the first gold of this streak in 1996 and has been the architect for this unprecedented run.

Japan, which was the only one of the 11 other teams to ever have beaten the U.S. in an Olympics, won a medal for the first time in the country’s history. The team’s best finish before Sunday was fifth.

The host nation has been on the rise since it hired coach Tom Hovasse. He said when he got the job 4 1/2 years ago that his team would be playing against the U.S. for the gold at the Tokyo Games — and would beat them.

He was half right.

The teams met in preliminary pool play and the U.S. won by 17 points after trailing by two after the first quarter. Just like that game, the Americans used their dominant post advantage to control the title game. Japan’s biggest player was 6-foot-1 — no match for the imposing front line led by Griner, who is 6-9.

While the general public and family members couldn’t attend the games because of the coronavirus pandemic, Bird did have fiancee Megan Rapinoe in the stands cheering her on. Bird came over and embraced Rapinoe after the game. She helped the U.S. women’s soccer team win a bronze medal earlier this week, scoring two goals in that game.

A large contingent of Japanese volunteers, who had been in the Saitama Super Arena for the entire tournament sat and applauded their team. No actual cheering was allowed because of the coronavirus pandemic.

___

More AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2020-tokyo-olympics and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports



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Olympics 2021 live updates – USA women’s volleyball, basketball both win gold; Americans take lead in gold medals

The final day of competition at the Olympic Games is here. After record-breaking days in the pool and on the track, history-making feats and inspiring moments, the Games come to a close in Tokyo. After the events, the Olympic closing ceremonies begin at 7 a.m. ET Sunday.

But first, we’ve got medals to hand out.

Saturday’s action started with the men’s marathon winding through the streets of Sapporo, Japan, where Eliud Kipchoge of Kenya won his second consecutive gold medal in dominant fashion, beating the field by more than a minute.

Then came the evening’s main event: the women’s basketball gold-medal game, which saw the United States take care of Japan for its seventh consecutive gold medal. Japan’s first-ever shot at gold was derailed in a 90-75 defeat, with Americans Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi each winning an unprecedented fifth gold medal.

While the Team USA women’s hoops team added to its gold-medal count, the U.S. women’s volleyball team got gold for the first time, dominating Brazil in a three-set sweep. That win also vaulted the Americans past China in the overall gold-medal standings, which they clinched when Chinese boxer Li Quan lost her gold-medal match to Great Britain’s Lauren Price.

In other boxing, American Keyshawn Davis fell short against Cuban rival Andy Cruz in the lightweight gold-medal bout, the latest in a string of closely contested matchups between the two fighters.

Here’s the best action from the last night in Tokyo:

USA women’s indoor volleyball makes history

Looking to win its first-ever Olympic gold medal, the U.S. women’s volleyball team entered Sunday’s match against Brazil focused on making history.

The team won the first four points in commanding fashion — and never looked back.

The American squad put on a dominant performance at Ariake Arena, winning in straight sets — 25-21, 25-20, 25-14 — in just 82 minutes. Andrea Drews and Michelle Bartsch-Hackley combined for 29 points.

“People say we’re going to be under so much pressure because we’ve never won the gold medal,” said the United States’ Jordan Larson. “But we’re under no pressure because we’ve never done it. Why not go out swinging?” — D’Arcy Maine


USA passes China in gold medals

With three gold medals — team golds in women’s indoor volleyball and women’s basketball and Jennifer Valente’s cycling gold — the United States ended the Olympics with 39 golds, one more than China’s 38. The Americans already had clinched the top spot for overall medals.


USA boxer Richard Torrez Jr. takes silver

American super heavyweight boxer Richard Torrez Jr. fell to Uzbekistan’s Bakhodir Jalolov by decision to take the silver medal. Torrez won the first round but couldn’t overcome a dominant second round by Jalolov.


Boxer Keyshawn Davis gets silver

United States lightweight boxer Keyshawn Davis fell just short of gold, losing to Cuba’s Andy Cruz.


Diana Taurasi and Sue Bird made history by winning their fifth women’s basketball gold medals with Team USA, which won its seventh straight gold by beating Japan 90-75.

The two vets, who won their first golds for Team USA in Athens in 2004, helped get the Americans out to a big lead Sunday.

Brittney Griner also did quality work for the Americans, scoring 30 points to help extend Team USA’s Olympic winning streak to 55 games.

Bird and Taurasi might not be done with Olympics hoops quite yet, though.


Cycling to gold

The United States’ Jennifer Valente rode to gold in the women’s omnium, putting the U.S. at 38 gold medals, at that point tied with China for tops of any country.


Ingebrigtsen sets Olympic record

Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen ended his Olympics with an epic performance, as the 20-year-old raced to gold in the men’s 1,500-meter run with a time of 3 minutes, 28.32 seconds.


Kipchoge goes back-to-back

Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge ran it back for gold, literally, in the men’s marathon in Sapporo, pulling away down the stretch to win his second consecutive gold medal. Kipchoge’s winning time of 2 hours, 8 minutes, 38 seconds was more than a minute better than the silver medalist, Netherlands’ Abdi Nageeye.

Here’s Kipchoge putting a bow on his dominant performance.

The battle for silver and bronze was also pretty epic.


The marathoner’s philosophy


Backing it up

As the Olympics come to a close, here’s an alternative, fun look at the action in Tokyo.


Shot-putting in real life

Gold medalist Ryan Crouser is the best in the world at shot put, but how does that relate to everyday life? Crouser shows us by shot-putting things.



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