India on Thursday announced a diplomatic boycott of the Winter Olympics in Beijing after a commander involved in 2020 border clashes between the two countries appeared as an Olympic torchbearer in the customary torch relay leading up to the Games.
The last-minute boycott, which will see India's top envoy in Beijing sit out Friday's Opening Ceremony, adds the world's most populous democracy to a list of Western nations who already have launched their own diplomatic no-shows, citing China's human rights record -- setting the tone for a controversial Olympic Games.
"It is indeed regrettable that the Chinese side has chosen to politicize an event like the Olympics," Arindam Bagchi, a spokesperson of India's Ministry of External Affairs, said in a televised speech on Thursday, where he announced the top diplomat at the Indian Embassy in Beijing will not be attending the Opening or the Closing Ceremony.
Following the official move, India's public broadcaster Doordarshan also announced it will not telecast the opening and closing ceremonies live. The country has one athlete competing this year, alpine skier Arif Khan.
The decisions were sparked after images showed People's Liberation Army commander Qi Fabao honoured as one of the some 1,200 people to bear the Olympic torch as it moves across the Olympic competition zones in the lead-up to the lighting of the Olympic cauldron Friday evening. Chinese basketball superstar and former NBA player Yao Ming and astronaut Jing Haipeng were among other honourees to carry the flame alongside Qi on the relay's opening day Wednesday.
Qi has been hailed a hero in China for his role fighting in the deadly 2020 India-China skirmish at a disputed border in the Himalayan region that left at least 20 Indian soldiers dead. China has said the People's Liberation Army lost four soldiers.
The skirmish saw soldiers on both sides battling with sticks, stones and nail-studded bamboo poles in what was the deadliest border clash between the two nuclear-armed neighbours in more than 40 years. Both sides have accused the other of overstepping the de facto border, the Line of Actual Control (LAC) that runs along the western sector of the Galwan Valley.
The inclusion of Qi, who sustained a head wound during the fighting, sparked backlash in India for bringing fraught politics between the two nations into what is meant to be a "peaceful competition" among nations.
Prominent Chinese commentator Hu Xijin, former editor of the nationalist state-owned tabloid the Global Times, hit back on the Indian reaction, writing on Twitter of Qi's participation: "What I saw from it was a call for China-India border peace and call for world peace. What's wrong with this?"
India's move further shortens the already truncated list of foreign diplomatic guests expected at the Games -- which also marks Chinese leader Xi Jinping's first time welcoming counterparts to China in well over a year, as China has maintained tight border controls and a stringent "zero-COVID" policy.
Just over 20 foreign leaders are expected to attend the event, where major democracies will be conspicuously absent and Russia's Vladimir Putin is expected to be Xi's most high-profile guest.
Australia, Britain, and Canada are among nations that joined a US-led diplomatic boycott of the Games, pointing to alleged human rights violations by China including of Uyghurs and other Muslim minorities in China's northwestern region of Xinjiang -- which Washington considers genocide.
Diplomatic boycotts mean that governments will not send delegations, but athletes continue to compete in the Games.
Other nations have declined invites to opening events due to the pandemic and Beijing's COVID-19 controls.