1. Inhalt
  2. Navigation
  3. Weitere Inhalte
  4. Metanavigation
  5. Suche
  6. Choose from 30 Languages

Sports

Politics Doesn't Belong at Olympics, Says UN Sport Advisor

UN Special Advisor on Sport Willi Lemke said an Olympic boycott wouldn't achieve anything and would just hurt the athletes. The IOC is the wrong address for human rights issues, he added.

Olympic torch

The Olympics are, above all, a festival for the athletes, said Lemke

DW-WORLD.DE: Mr. Lemke, does the United Nations consider the Olympic Games to be endangered by the conflict in Tibet?

Willi Lemke: The United Nations wants the Olympic Games in China to go peacefully and in the Olympic spirit. We want the games to take place in a way that brings people together and promotes the UN's Millennium Development Goals. That's why we'll be closely observing what happens in China over the next weeks and months.

What are the aims of the UN Millennium Goals?

Willi Lemke

Lemke said the UN doesn't support an Olympic boycott

There are eight development goals that should be reached by the year 2015. One of them is fighting poverty in the world. Education for everyone, equality, climate and environmental protection, and human rights are also included.

Human rights are not just a burning topic in China but in the whole world. Of course, the focus is on China right now because of the Olympic Games. That's why the United Nations is interested in the progress that's been made there in the last few months and years. But the developments of the last months have also raised a lot of new questions.

What position does the UN take in discussions about a possible boycott of the Olympic Games?

We cannot endorse a boycott; we're of the same opinion as the International Olympic Committee. A boycott would affect the athletes most of all, which would be unthinkable for us.

The United Nations very much wants it to be a big celebration for the athletes. But sports always take place within a society. The soccer World Cup in Germany, for example, was a grandiose success, not just from an athletic but also a political point of view. Germany presented soccer in a wonderful way -- and it's just the same with China. Everyone was aware of China's form of government when the IOC awarded them the games.

Fan with face painted in colors of German flag

Lemke compared the Olympics to the World Cup

A boycott would above all affect the athletes from all over the world who have trained for the event over the past few years. Besides, similar boycotts have never achieved anything relevant in the past. There definitely won't be a majority at the IOC or at the UN who support a boycott of the games.

What can athletes do against human rights violations?

Unfortunately, human rights are violated in many countries in the world. It's wrong to push this problem off onto the IOC. These issues should be brought up with political bodies, human rights organizations and the UN.

I think it's the wrong approach to demand that sports organizations solve these political problems just a few weeks before the Olympic Games. But it is the view of the IOC that the athletes -- as responsible citizens -- have the right to express themselves on political issues.

We don't want to silence the athletes. But political topics shouldn't be discussed in the context of a sports competition.

International regulations have been laid down to ensure that the event locations remain free from demonstrations. It should be a festival for the athletes, not just in terms of sports but also as a sign of friendship between nations. When 25,000 journalists and lots of athletes from around the world meet in Beijing, there will be many possibilities for communication.

Man carrying two buckets walks by a poster with the Olympic rings

The Olympics should be a success for China, said Lemke

What can the UN Special Advisor on Sport do to help make the Olympic Games a success?

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has given me three tasks. First, I am to advocate sports as an instrument to promote development and peace and represent the interests of sports and, above all, the secretary general, in the UN. Secondly, I should play a representative role. When Ban Ki-moon isn't able to participate in large sports events, I will take his place, accompany or advise him.

Thirdly, I should serve as a mediator between the media, the International Olympic Committee, the United Nations and the event organizers. The Olympic Games should be a success for the Chinese and for the whole world. But the games aren't just an event for the Chinese, but also for the sports world and the International Olympic Committee.

We want to bring people together and not draw them apart.

dw.de

WWW Links

  • Happy birthday

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    Happy birthday

    The most famous film festival in the world is celebrating its 65th birthday - it's a pensionable age, but Cannes is showing no signs of slowing down. The latest edition offers the usual glamorous circus of film stars, red carpets and galas, while the official festival poster features Marilyn Monroe, whose death 50 years ago will also be commemorated.

  • The Croisette all spruced up

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    The Croisette all spruced up

    Unlike February's Berlin Film Festival, Cannes always offers fantastic weather – an advantage not to be underestimated. The Cote d'Azur boasts perennial sunshine, which helps to attract stars from around the world, and the Hollywood glitterati are always welcome adornments to the red carpets. This year, Bruce Willis, Nicole Kidman, Brad Pitt and Reese Whiterspoon are all expected to attend.

  • Homegrown cinema

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    Homegrown cinema

    Of course, the competition for the Golden and the Silver Palm is always a showcase for new French cinema. Festival director Thierry Fremaux has invited several French films into this year's competition, including works by Jacques Audiard, Alain Resnais and Leos Carax. The latter is showing his eagerly anticipated "Holy Motors" (pictured).

  • Cronenberg, the Canadian auteur

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    Cronenberg, the Canadian auteur

    When Canadian director David Cronenberg has a new film to show, the world's biggest festivals fight over it. Cannes traditionally has the best chances, and it won out again this year. "Cosmopolis", based on a novel by Don DeLillo, is about all the things that can happen to a stockbroker on his way to the hairdresser - including a chance meeting with Juliette Binoche.

  • Red carpet fashion show

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    Red carpet fashion show

    Premieres begin with the parade along the famous red carpet. Photographers shriek to lure the best poses from the stars, while reporters plead for a short statement. And, of course, the eyes of the world are on the stunning wardrobes of the actresses - as last year, when Chinese actress Fan Bing Bing graced the Croisette.

  • An Iranian regular

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    An Iranian regular

    Iranian filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami, born in 1940, has been a Cannes regular for many years, and he won the Golden Palm 15 years ago. His new film "Like Someone in Love" is also in this year's competition. The French-Japanese co-production details a mysterious meeting between a young woman and an old man in Tokyo.

  • Great Danes

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    Great Danes

    Denmark has been a cinematic superpower for many years, and this year's Cannes is graced by the latest work from Thomas Vinterberg, who won the Jury Prize in 1998 for "Festen." Vinterberg's 2012 offering "Jagden" features Mads Mikkelsen (pictured) playing a man who believes he faces false accusations of pedophilia. Child abuse was also a theme of "Festen."

  • The jury

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    The jury

    Italian director Nanni Moretti, who won the 2001 Golden Palm for "The Son's Room," is the president of this year's Cannes jury. He is joined by German actress Diane Kruger, US director Alexander Payne and French fashion designer Jean-Paul Gaultier. They decide who gets the big prizes this year.

  • Bleak work from Ukraine

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    Bleak work from Ukraine

    Ukrainian director Sergei Loznitsa has also been invited to Cannes once again, after showing his debut "My Joy" in 2010. His new work "In The Fog" is set in 1942, and depicts scenes from the Soviet front in World War II. It is a German-Dutch-Lithuanian-Russian co-production.

  • Global co-productions

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    Global co-productions

    More and more films are now made with money from several countries – often on different continents. One example of a "global" production like this is "Post Tenebras Lux," by Mexican director Carlos Reygadas. The movie, competing for this year's Golden Palm, was completed with money from the Netherlands, France, Mexico and Germany. It was filmed in Mexico, England, Spain and Belgium.

  • View from America

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    View from America

    Cannes always makes room for big Hollywood cinema. Several studios use the festival as a launch pad for their latest major productions. But the US competition entry "The Paperboy" is a more modest affair, about a falsely convicted man played by John Cusack (pictured). The movie, set in 1960s Florida, promises classic US courtroom drama.

  • A German view of Turkey

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    A German view of Turkey

    Once again, German films are few and far between in Cannes, though Hamburg director Fatih Akin is presenting his new documentary "The Garbage in the Garden of Eden," in one of the festival's sub-sections. The movie charts the struggle of a tiny Turkish village against a giant garbage dump.

  • Cannes turns 65

    Happy Birthday Cannes

    Cannes turns 65

    Over the decades, Cannes has established itself as the world's premier film festival, and around 4,600 journalists are once again expected this year. Unlike Berlin, Cannes is not a people's festival, where the general public gets to see the films. And at no other festival is so much filming and photographing going on. Moreover, few other festivals offer cinema on the beach!


    Author: Ben Knight | Editor: Andreas Illmer