The FIFA World Cup 2026 in the United States, Mexico, and Canada has captured the global imagination through open play, star players, fan diversity, and state-of-the-art stadiums. Few events attract attention quite like a World Cup, drawing worldwide television audiences at all hours of the day and night. Yet football’s showcase tournament is rarely free from controversy. This World Cup has generated criticism over travel restrictions, eye-watering ticket prices, and commercial pressures that have reshaped the game. Less visible are protests directed at corporate actors, such as Aramco and Mytel, linking FIFA to states with dismal human rights records.
The World Cup has long been used by malign governments seeking legitimacy and international prestige. Benito Mussolini recognized the propaganda value of the tournament when Italy hosted the 1934 World Cup, presenting fascist Italy as modern, disciplined, and successful. During Argentina’s 1978 World Cup, General Jorge Rafael Videla’s military dictatorship projected an image of national unity while political prisoners were tortured and disappeared only miles from tournament venues. More recently, Russia’s hosting of the 2018 World Cup and Qatar’s of the 2022 tournament demonstrated how major football events can help soften international criticism and cultivate favorable narratives.
Much of the discussion surrounding “sportswashing” focuses on international competition. Yet domestic tournaments can serve a similar function. The Chinese government’s promotion of football in the Uyghur Region provides an example of how local sporting events can be mobilized to distract from ongoing human rights violations while advancing the state’s political objectives.
Since 2017, the Chinese state has been implicated in a range of human rights abuses targeting Uyghurs and other Turkic peoples, including mass internment, state-sponsored forced labor, widespread surveillance, cultural destruction, and forced sterilization. The Uyghur Tribunal concluded that these policies amounted to genocide, while the United Nations found that they may constitute crimes against humanity.
As international scrutiny intensified, Beijing gradually shifted its messaging. Rather than defending its crackdown, officials began presenting those same policies as responsible for creating a stable region now open to visitors and investors. Uyghurs increasingly appeared in state narratives as grateful beneficiaries of development and modernization. International hotel chains and travel companies participated in building a regional tourism industry, while social media influencers amplified images of hospitality and prosperity, ignoring the context of repression. Sporting events became an important part of this effort. Winter sports, rally races, and other competitions helped normalize conditions and redirect attention away from allegations of atrocity crimes.
The Assimilation Cup
Football has now become one of the most visible components of China’s shift in messaging.
Chinese state media is promoting the 2026 Tongxin Cup Xinjiang Super League as the first region-wide amateur football competition. Fourteen prefecture-level teams are competing in a tournament running from May through August. The extensive state media coverage emphasized large crowds, inexpensive tickets, and grassroots participation. The league is also marketed as an economic driver, with prefecture governments promoting football tourism, cultural performances, merchandise, and local branding campaigns.
These initiatives fit the sportswashing aim to distract from human rights abuses and cultivate favorable narratives. Yet the political messaging surrounding the Tongxin Cup reveals something else. The competition’s name, “Tongxin” (同心) – translated as “one heart” or “united as one” – carries strong associations with Chinese Communist Party (CCP) discourse on “ethnic unity.” State media consistently frame the Tongxin Cup as bringing players and spectators from “all ethnic groups” together, while the tournament’s pomegranate-themed mascots, Tongtong and Xinxin, draw directly on CCP narratives of ethnic unity. The pomegranate branding is a direct reference to Xi Jinping’s comment that China’s ethnic groups should be “closely united like the seeds of a pomegranate.”
A promotional graphic showing 2026 Tongxin Cup mascots Tongtong and Xinxin.




