<p>The focus immediately shifts to Beijing as the curtain falls on the Tokyo Olympics, with a growing coronavirus outbreak in China and boycott calls looming large just six months from the start of the Winter Games.</p>.<p>The Beijing 2022 Olympics are scheduled to take place from February 4 to 20, when the Chinese capital will become the first city to host a Winter and Summer Games.</p>.<p>New venues have been constructed and some from Beijing 2008, including the "Bird's Nest" National Stadium, are being spruced up as China attempts to show the world its best face.</p>.<p>The 2022 Games will be spread over three main zones -- Beijing, Yanqing and Zhangjiakou, which is about 180 kilometres (110 miles) northwest of the capital. A high-speed train will connect the three hubs.</p>.<p>All competition venues were completed several months ago and the Chinese government has been keen to assert that preparations have successfully ploughed on despite the coronavirus pandemic.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/japan-to-douse-olympic-flame-of-games-transformed-by-pandemic-and-drama-1017421.html" target="_blank">Read | Japan to douse Olympic flame of Games transformed by pandemic and drama</a></strong></p>.<p>But just as Beijing 2022 swings into view, China is now facing its largest virus outbreak in months, even if infection numbers are still low compared with many other countries.</p>.<p>Another headache for the Beijing Olympics and China's ruling Communist Party is sustained calls from activists, the Uyghur diaspora and some Western politicians for a boycott over the country's rights record, especially the fate of Muslim minorities.</p>.<p>China, where Covid-19 emerged towards the end of 2019, already had some of the world's strictest containment measures and is ramping them up further in the capital.</p>.<p>People flying into China from abroad must quarantine for between two and three weeks in a hotel, and it is unclear if the thousands of athletes, team officials, media and others coming to the Games will have to do likewise.</p>.<p>Bo Li, assistant professor of sports management at Miami University in Ohio, said Beijing 2022 organisers should take their cue from Tokyo in handling the virus threat.</p>.<p>There were concerns there would be mass infections among participants in Japan but while there have been cases, the worst fears have not materialised.</p>.<p>The International Olympic Committee (IOC) and local organisers insisted on testing everyone involved before and regularly during the Games, and keeping athletes away from the public.</p>.<p>Spectators have also been barred from most events at Tokyo 2020 -- it is unclear whether Beijing 2022 will follow suit.</p>.<p>"Overall the strategy that has been used by Tokyo has been pretty successful and I think Beijing will duplicate something very similar," said Bo Li, adding that he was "curious" about what China would do with its current strict quarantine procedures.</p>.<p>"I don't think it's realistic to expect the athletes to arrive in Beijing (at least) two weeks in advance and to be quarantined," he said.</p>.<p>"From the financial point of view, who would pay the bill? The organising committee? The IOC?</p>.<p>"The preparation of the athletes would be greatly affected, it would be unacceptable to most of them."</p>.<p>The United States says Beijing is carrying out a genocide against Uyghurs in the region of Xinjiang and experts estimate more than one million people have been incarcerated in detention camps.</p>.<p>Beijing denies genocide and has described the camps as vocational training centres.</p>.<p>Yaqiu Wang, a New-York based China researcher for Human Rights Watch, stopped short of calling for a full boycott: "Athletes have been preparing their whole lives to have this moment, so taking that moment away is wrong.</p>.<p>"Athletes can still go, but sponsors, international dignitaries, celebrities, we think they should not go to lend legitimacy to the Chinese government hosting the Games."</p>.<p>Mark Dreyer, a China sports analyst, said that many questions remain unanswered about the Winter Games, even with fewer than 200 days to go.</p>.<p>"Ticketing plans haven't been released. And do we know about spectators? It's looking likely there are not going be international spectators allowed, but what about domestic spectators?" asked Beijing-based Dreyer, who runs the China Sports Insider website.</p>.<p>"All this sort of stuff, normally it takes years to plan and there are still test events supposedly happening between now and the Games.</p>.<p>"Will those happen? Will they provide us any additional information in terms of how China plans to run the real thing?"</p>
<p>The focus immediately shifts to Beijing as the curtain falls on the Tokyo Olympics, with a growing coronavirus outbreak in China and boycott calls looming large just six months from the start of the Winter Games.</p>.<p>The Beijing 2022 Olympics are scheduled to take place from February 4 to 20, when the Chinese capital will become the first city to host a Winter and Summer Games.</p>.<p>New venues have been constructed and some from Beijing 2008, including the "Bird's Nest" National Stadium, are being spruced up as China attempts to show the world its best face.</p>.<p>The 2022 Games will be spread over three main zones -- Beijing, Yanqing and Zhangjiakou, which is about 180 kilometres (110 miles) northwest of the capital. A high-speed train will connect the three hubs.</p>.<p>All competition venues were completed several months ago and the Chinese government has been keen to assert that preparations have successfully ploughed on despite the coronavirus pandemic.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/japan-to-douse-olympic-flame-of-games-transformed-by-pandemic-and-drama-1017421.html" target="_blank">Read | Japan to douse Olympic flame of Games transformed by pandemic and drama</a></strong></p>.<p>But just as Beijing 2022 swings into view, China is now facing its largest virus outbreak in months, even if infection numbers are still low compared with many other countries.</p>.<p>Another headache for the Beijing Olympics and China's ruling Communist Party is sustained calls from activists, the Uyghur diaspora and some Western politicians for a boycott over the country's rights record, especially the fate of Muslim minorities.</p>.<p>China, where Covid-19 emerged towards the end of 2019, already had some of the world's strictest containment measures and is ramping them up further in the capital.</p>.<p>People flying into China from abroad must quarantine for between two and three weeks in a hotel, and it is unclear if the thousands of athletes, team officials, media and others coming to the Games will have to do likewise.</p>.<p>Bo Li, assistant professor of sports management at Miami University in Ohio, said Beijing 2022 organisers should take their cue from Tokyo in handling the virus threat.</p>.<p>There were concerns there would be mass infections among participants in Japan but while there have been cases, the worst fears have not materialised.</p>.<p>The International Olympic Committee (IOC) and local organisers insisted on testing everyone involved before and regularly during the Games, and keeping athletes away from the public.</p>.<p>Spectators have also been barred from most events at Tokyo 2020 -- it is unclear whether Beijing 2022 will follow suit.</p>.<p>"Overall the strategy that has been used by Tokyo has been pretty successful and I think Beijing will duplicate something very similar," said Bo Li, adding that he was "curious" about what China would do with its current strict quarantine procedures.</p>.<p>"I don't think it's realistic to expect the athletes to arrive in Beijing (at least) two weeks in advance and to be quarantined," he said.</p>.<p>"From the financial point of view, who would pay the bill? The organising committee? The IOC?</p>.<p>"The preparation of the athletes would be greatly affected, it would be unacceptable to most of them."</p>.<p>The United States says Beijing is carrying out a genocide against Uyghurs in the region of Xinjiang and experts estimate more than one million people have been incarcerated in detention camps.</p>.<p>Beijing denies genocide and has described the camps as vocational training centres.</p>.<p>Yaqiu Wang, a New-York based China researcher for Human Rights Watch, stopped short of calling for a full boycott: "Athletes have been preparing their whole lives to have this moment, so taking that moment away is wrong.</p>.<p>"Athletes can still go, but sponsors, international dignitaries, celebrities, we think they should not go to lend legitimacy to the Chinese government hosting the Games."</p>.<p>Mark Dreyer, a China sports analyst, said that many questions remain unanswered about the Winter Games, even with fewer than 200 days to go.</p>.<p>"Ticketing plans haven't been released. And do we know about spectators? It's looking likely there are not going be international spectators allowed, but what about domestic spectators?" asked Beijing-based Dreyer, who runs the China Sports Insider website.</p>.<p>"All this sort of stuff, normally it takes years to plan and there are still test events supposedly happening between now and the Games.</p>.<p>"Will those happen? Will they provide us any additional information in terms of how China plans to run the real thing?"</p>