Japan PM Kishida Says He Has No Plan to Visit Beijing Olympics

Japan PM Kishida Says He Has No Plan to Visit Beijing Olympics
Japan's Prime Minister Fumio Kishida wearing a face mask delivers his policy speech at the start of an extraordinary session of the lower house of the parliament, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, in Tokyo, on Dec. 6, 2021. Issei Kato/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

TOKYO—Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said on Thursday he has no plan to attend the Winter Olympics in Beijing at the moment, taking what appeared to be a softer tone than Western allies who have declared a diplomatic boycott.

The issue of whether Japan will send senior officials to the Games in February is in focus after the United States, Canada, Australia, and Britain all said their officials will not attend in order to send China a message over its human rights record.

China has called the boycotts “political posturing” and a smear campaign.

Kishida made the comment in parliament.

Japan, a close ally of the United States, is concerned about what it perceives as growing threats from China. But it is also economically reliant on its neighbor, both as a manufacturing hub and as a customer for its automobiles and other products.

Senior Japanese government officials will likely skip the Games, the Yomiuri newspaper has previously reported, although government officials have so far said that nothing had been decided.

By David Dolan and Daniel Leussink