Beijing: China on Wednesday reacted sharply to Australia's decision to join the US diplomatic boycott of the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, saying that it never planned to invite Australian officials and “nobody cares” whether they come or not.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said in Canberra on Wednesday that the decision to join the US boycott was in response to "human rights abuses" in China's Muslim-majority Xinjiang province and "many other issues that Australia has consistently raised".
Australian athletes would however attend the Games to be held in February, he said.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman, Wang Wenbin said Beijing has lodged a diplomatic protest in response to Australia's diplomatic boycott.
“China has reiterated many times that the winter Olympics is not a stage for political posturing and manipulation,” Wang told a media briefing here, reacting to Australia's decision.
“China never planned to invite any Australian officials to the games. Whether they come or not nobody cares”, he said.
“It exposes fully that the Australian government has been so blindly following certain country's steps that it doesn't tell right from wrong, and has no bottom line”, he said, without directly referring to the US decision on diplomatic boycott.
“China deplores and rejects this and has lodged stern representations with Australia”, he asserted.
The Winter Olympics is scheduled to take place from February 4 to 20 in Beijing and towns in the neighbouring Hebei province.
On Tuesday, China protested to the US after Washington announced its decision on the diplomatic boycott and threatened to retaliate without giving further details.
Also Read:US announces diplomatic boycott of Beijing Winter Olympics
The US said it would not send diplomats to the Games in Beijing over concerns about China's human rights record.
Besides the US, the European Union and several other western countries were expected to follow suit.
New Zealand has announced on Tuesday that it will not send diplomatic representatives at a ministerial level to the Beijing Winter Olympics in February, Deputy Prime Minister Grant Robertson said. He cited COVID-19 as the reason.
Morrison said it was "no surprise" that Australia had joined the boycott, given relations with China had deteriorated in recent years.