International Olympic Committee (IOC) senior member Dick Pound said he had no regrets about China being selected to host the 2022 Winter Games despite the international backlash over the country's human rights record.

The United States, Canada, Britain and Australia are among the countries that recently announced a diplomatic boycott of the Feb. 4-20 Beijing Games, which China called "political posturing."

"In the sense of having a host country that could organize and put on an excellent Games from a Games perspective, there's absolutely nothing wrong with China," 

"It's a very good and very organized country."

Pound reiterated the IOC's stance that it has no role to play in bringing about political change in any country.

"You have to be reasonable about the expectations of a relatively small organization," he said of the IOC.

"When we award the Games to a country, we don't do it as an indication that we support the political objectives of that country.

"It's done on the basis of the importance of the country as a sporting nation and its ability to organize Games at the level that the world now expects."

He said China's Olympic Organizing Committee has agreed to allow athletes to speak freely during news conferences on issues such as the treatment of minority Muslims in China's Xinjiang region, which U.S. President Joe Biden's administration has called genocide. China denies all human rights abuses.

"The organizing committee has given that guarantee that there will be freedom of speech for athletes," added Pound.

Athletes will still have to abide by an IOC rule that says they cannot protest during sporting events or medal ceremonies.

(Reporting by Rory Carroll in Los Angeles; Editing by Ken Ferris)