The Hamilton Spectator

Russia’s path to ’24 Games takes shape, Ukraine objects

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Russia’s path to sending a team to the Paris Olympics next year became clearer Thursday amid fierce objections from Ukraine.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee indicated Wednesday it favours officially neutral teams from Russia and its ally Belarus at the 2024 Olympics despite a plea from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to exclude them entirely.

A day later, Russia and Belarus were invited to compete at the Asian Games, a key Olympic qualifier.

Russia normally competes as part of Europe but has a tense relationsh­ip with many of the countries set to host qualifying events there. Russia and Belarus have been barred from almost all internatio­nal competitio­ns in Olympic sports following the invasion of Ukraine.

Zelenskyy has said he told French President Emmanuel Macron, whose country is hosting the Olympics, that Russia should have “no place” there. Ukraine is seeking to rally support against the IOC-brokered plan.

“IOC has been disregardi­ng Russian war crimes, claiming that ‘No athlete should be prevented from competing just because of their passport,’ while Ukrainian athletes continue to be killed by Russia because of their passports. I urge all sports figures to make their stance known,” Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba wrote Thursday on Twitter.

Ukraine boycotted an Olympic qualifier in judo last year when Russians were allowed to compete as neutrals.

In Russia, there was praise for the IOC’s approach from Igor Levitin, an aide to President Vladimir Putin who holds influentia­l government and sports posts.

“I think it is already a success. Olympic society understand­s that the Olympic Games cannot be staged without Russia,” said Levitin, who is the senior vice-president of the Russian Olympic Committee, in comments reported by state news agency Tass.

Some Russian officials expressed unhappines­s at the IOC declaring it would not allow athletes found to be “actively supporting the war in Ukraine.” ROC president Stanislav Pozdnyakov said Wednesday he opposed “any restrictio­ns, extra requiremen­ts or sanctions.”

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo said she backs Russians competing as neutral athletes when her city hosts the Games, without the Russian flag. “I think it’s a time for athletes and that you shouldn’t deprive athletes of their competitio­n. But I think and I plead, like a large part of the sporting movement, that there isn’t a delegation behind the Russian banner,” she told France 2 television.

There was no immediate response from the French government, even as other European countries criticized the IOC. British Culture Secretary Michelle Donelan said the IOC’s stance was “a world away from the reality of war being felt by the Ukrainian people.” In Germany, Interior Minister Nancy Faeser called it “the wrong path.”

The IOC statement Wednesday referenced the civil war in the former Yugoslavia around the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona. The country was under United Nations sanctions so Yugoslav athletes were allowed to compete individual­ly only as “Independen­t Olympic Participan­ts.” They didn’t take part in team sports such as soccer and basketball.

That would be stricter than previous IOC measures against Russia in the years-long fallout from one of the largest doping cases in sports history. Russians competed under the name “Olympic Athlete from Russia” at the 2018 Winter Olympics and as ROC in 2021 and 2022, without their country’s anthem or flag but with national colours on uniforms.

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