Spielberg Mulls Quitting Olympics to Pressure Chinese on Darfur
July 27, 2007 (LOS ANGELES) — Steven Spielberg, under pressure from Darfur activists, may quit his post as artistic adviser to the 2008 Beijing Olympics, unless China takes a harder line against Sudan, a representative of the film director told ABC News.
China, Sudan’s largest oil customer and perennial defender, has come under renewed scrutiny in the lead up to the Olympics, as the country juggles its need for cheap energy with its desire to host a trouble-free games.
As celebrities-cum-activists increasingly link the ongoing genocide with China’s patronage, some — most notably and vocally, the actress Mia Farrow — have accused Spielberg of complicity, by not using his prominence and position to pressure the Chinese government to change course.
“Is Mr. Spielberg, who in 1994 founded the Shoah Foundation to record the testimony of survivors of the holocaust, aware that China is bankrolling Darfur’s genocide?” Farrow and her son Ronan wrote in a March Wall Street Journal editorial.
In that same piece, “The Genocide Olympics,” Farrow compared Spielberg to the Nazi director Leni Riefenstahl whose film “Olympia” was a paean to the 1936 Berlin Games.
“Does Mr. Spielberg really want to go down in history as the Leni Riefenstahl of the Beijing Games,” Farrow wrote.
Days after Farrow’s editorial, Spielberg wrote an open letter to Hu Jintao, president of China. “I am writing this letter to you, not as one of the overseas artistic advisors to the Olympic Ceremonies, but as a private citizen who has made a personal commitment to do all I can to oppose genocide. … Accordingly, I add my voice to those who ask that China change its policy toward Sudan and pressure the Sudanese government to accept the entrance of United Nations peacekeepers to protect the victims of genocide in Darfur,” Spielberg wrote.
Excluding that letter, Spielberg and his representatives have, until now, been tight-lipped on what additional action the director might take.
“Steven will make a determination in the next few weeks regarding his work with the Chinese. Our main interest is ending the genocide. No one is clear on the best way to do this,” Spielberg’s spokesman Andy Spahn told ABCNEWS.com.
(ABC News)