04 February 2022

ON THE BREAKFAST MENU TODAY IN AMERICA: Spectacular Opening Ceremonies Winter Olympics 2022

NBC, the Peacock network with the rights to broadcast the Olympics, will show the opening ceremony live, starting its show at 6:30 a.m. Friday.
According to the network, this year’s Olympics will be the first to include coverage of all events both live and on demand.
The ceremony, which officially opens the Winter Games even though some events already have started, is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. in China. With the 13-hour time difference to the East Coast of the United States, that’s 7 a.m. for some of the country.
This post has two feature stories and links to other related content: 1 is from HuffPost and the other from Aljazeera

Olympic Fans In U.S. Can Watch Opening Ceremony With Breakfast

NBC, the network with the rights to broadcast the Olympics, will broadcast the opening ceremony live, starting its show at 6:30 a.m. Friday.

<div class=__reading__mode__extracted__imagecaption>Officials ran through the planned light show during a rehearsal for the opening ceremony of the 2022 Winter Olympics.

BEIJING (AP) — Instead of waiting until prime time, Olympic fans in the United States will be able to watch the opening ceremony of the Beijing Games on Friday with their morning cup of coffee. . .Several sports, including hockey and figure skating, started before the opening ceremony began, but no medals will be awarded until Saturday, the first full day of competition.

> There will be six gold medals awarded on that first day, including in men’s moguls and the mixed team relay in short track speedskating. The marquee men’s downhill in skiing is set for Sunday, while Mikaela Shiffrin will go for her first gold on Monday in the women’s giant slalom.

[...] The closing ceremony will be on Feb. 20."

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Winter Olympics: Which world leaders are attending Beijing 2022?

A diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Olympics has reduced the number of world leaders attending the Games.

A diplomatic boycott of the Winter Olympics over human rights violations in China and concerns about COVID-19 have reduced the number of world leaders and foreign dignitaries attending the games.

Still, Chinese President Xi Jinping was due to meet more than 20 leaders as Beijing officially kicks off the event on Friday.

A look at who is attending, who is staying away and why:

Countries whose leaders are attending

Russia: President Vladimir Putin is meeting Xi before the opening ceremony, underscoring their close ties as they both face deteriorating relations with the United States.

Egypt and Serbia: Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi and Serbia’s Aleksandar Vucic have gravitated towards China amid growing frictions with the West.

Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE: China is Saudi Arabia’s largest buyer of oil and a significant customer of Qatar’s natural gas.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s de facto leader, is appearing at the Winter Games as investors and some governments signal warming relations after the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan: The leaders of all five former Soviet republics in Central Asia are heading to Beijing, highlighting the region’s increasingly close ties with China.

Kyrgyzstan’s President Sadyr Japarov pushed last month for the revival of a long-delayed project to build a railway from China through his country to Uzbekistan. China is Turkmenistan’s only reliable key buyer of natural gas.

Argentina and Ecuador: Argentina is set to become the first major Latin American country to join China’s Belt and Road Initiative. In Beijing, President Alberto Fernandez is also expected to discuss China’s help building Argentina’s first nuclear power plant since 1981.

Meanwhile, President Guillermo Lasso is seeking to renegotiate Ecuador’s $4.6bn debt with China.

United Nations: Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus will attend the opening ceremony.

The International Olympic Committee is a close partner of the UN, Guterres said, and the Olympics brings together people with a message of solidarity and peace.

Countries that are boycotting 

The US announced a diplomatic boycott while allowing its athletes to compete. Major US allies followed, including the United Kingdom, Australia and Canada.

Kosovo and Lithuania, whose relations with China have nosedived over their ties with Taiwan, are also boycotting the games diplomatically.

India said it would not send any officials following reports that a Chinese military commander who was involved in deadly clashes with Indian border forces in 2020 had been chosen as one of the Olympic torchbearers in Beijing.

Non-boycotters, but not attending

The royals in Norway and Sweden, who normally attend the Winter Olympics, are not going.

Neither are any leaders from Germany, Austria or Switzerland, all big winter sports nations.

Officially they are citing the coronavirus pandemic, rather than any diplomatic protest. Others, such as Denmark, the Netherlands and New Zealand have cited COVID-19 restrictions while also expressing concern over China’s human rights situation.

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https://olympics.com/en/news/beijing-2022-unveils-official-emblems 

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