A total of 18 medals, of which eight gold, make Beijing Sweden's best Winter Olympics to date.

But there is a smolk in the cup of joy.

What has perhaps shaken the most is the story of the 15-year-old Russian superstar Kamila Valieva.

The girl was tested positive for a banned heart medicine but was still allowed to compete further in the Olympic figure skating - something that created strong reactions.

Called the "Genocide Olympics"

Not least with SOK's Peter Reinebo.

- We have nations like Russia that systematically cheat and in principle also engage in child abuse.

I think that is deplorable, says Reinebo.

Even long before the inauguration on February 4, the games were called the "Genocide Olympics", and hundreds of organizations have demanded a boycott.

Many in the Olympic movement breathed a sigh of relief when Paris (2024) and Los Angeles (2028) hosted the upcoming summer games, followed by Brisbane in Australia (2032).

Milan-Cortina d'Ampezzo will host the next Winter Olympics.

-I would like to see the Olympics in the future in the countries we now have in the future - including Sweden - and not in dictatorships, SOK's Peter Reinebo answers the question of what he wants to see from the IOC in the future.

Regular concentration camps

For China as an organizer, it has not been easy to digest for many.

It is about the lack of human rights.

At least one million, possibly up to two million, Uighurs and people belonging to other Muslim minority groups are estimated to be held or have been held in detention camps in Xinjiang in northwestern China.

There have been reports of forced labor and even outright concentration camps, and according to UN experts, witnesses and activists, people there are separated from their families, locked up without trial, politically indoctrinated and exposed to violence.

The Tibetan Buddhist are also exposed by the Chinese regime, and the situation in Hong Kong leaves much to be desired.

Human rights organizations have called on Olympic activists to avoid criticizing China during the Games.

Otherwise, they risk being prosecuted in China.

TT: The active people who are here - have they had their own discussions on site here in China?

There are recommendations to keep quiet here and talk when you get home?

-Here we have focused on sports and not talked about human rights - we have done that before, says Peter Reinebo and refers, among other things, to the education that SOK has hired Civil Rights Defenders to hold for Swedish activists.

-I am very confident that our activists know that we have taken a stand for something other than the conditions we are in here.