From Deseret News archives:

Huntsman supports protests over China's treatment of Tibet

Published: Tuesday, April 8, 2008 12:50 a.m. MDT
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Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. said Monday he supports the protests against China's treatment of Tibet that are disrupting the Olympic torch relay for the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing.

"Of course, I do. This is who we are," Huntsman, who has represented the U.S. government in China, told the Deseret Morning News. "I think we ought to be totally American about it, in terms of our expressions of outrage and concern and speaking up front and openly as we always do as Americans."

The governor said he protested outside the Chinese embassy in Washington, D.C., against China's brutal 1989 crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square — even though he ran the Asian affairs bureau for the U.S. Commerce Department at the time.

But Huntsman stopped short Monday of calling for President Bush to join leaders in France, Germany, Poland, Norway, Sweden and other nations who are at least considering a boycott of the Olympics' Aug. 8 opening ceremonies.

"Our country now has a policy of engagement. And I don't disagree," said the governor, who also served as a U.S. trade representative to China and speaks fluent Mandarin. "Because by engaging partners, we bring about change."

Monday, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton issued a statement saying Bush should boycott the opening ceremonies "absent major changes by the Chinese government." The New York senator cited the recent violent clashes in Tibet as well as China's support for the Sudan despite the genocide in Darfur.

Former GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney, who ran the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, has said he opposes such a boycott because the opening ceremonies are supposed to focus on the athletes participating in the Games, not the host country.

"If you think the opening ceremony is about recognizing China, then you probably would boycott it," Romney recently told CNN News. "If you think it's about recognizing the world and humankind, then you're there to pay respect to the athlete."

A number of Utahns are expected to participate in a protest march set for Wednesday in San Francisco during the Olympic torch's only stop in the United States. Protesters scaled the Golden Gate Bridge Monday in anticipation of the next leg of the international torch relay.

Already, protesters in London and Paris have attempted to snuff out the Olympic flame to bring attention to China's human rights record.

Huntsman said such protests can help pressure the Chinese government to "undertake a healthy dialog" with Tibet, considered an autonomous region. Last month, protests by Buddhist monks in Lhasa turned deadly as Chinese security forces poured into the Tibetan capital.

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