The Jerusalem Post

Ukraine’s Zelensky decries neutrality in sports during war

-

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned the idea of neutrality in sports at a time when his country’s athletes fight and die in war, while their Russian counterpar­ts may be permitted to compete.

Redoubling his efforts in what he called “a marathon of honesty” to stop Russian athletes from taking part in the 2024 Olympics, Zelensky said their presence would normalize Russia’s invasion.

“There is no such thing as neutrality when a war like this is going on. And we know how often tyrannies try to use sports for their ideologica­l interests,” Zelensky said on Saturday evening.

Zelensky said on Friday that Ukraine would launch an internatio­nal campaign to keep Russia out of the 2024 summer games, which will be held in Paris.

Russia said that any attempt to squeeze it out of internatio­nal sport was “doomed to fail.”

The war in Ukraine, now in its 12 month, has no end in sight, with Russia intensifyi­ng attacks on its neighbor in recent weeks. The Russian invasion has killed thousands, displaced millions and turn cities into rubble.

“Ukrainian athletes are forced to defend the lives of their loved ones and the freedom of our people from Russian aggression,” Zelensky said. “Russian strikes took the lives of hundreds of Ukrainian men and women who could have brought their talents to world sports.”

On Wednesday, the Olympic Council of Asia had offered Russian and Belarusian athletes the chance to compete in Asia, giving them a qualificat­ion pathway for the 2024 Olympics.

Ukraine says it could boycott the Games if Russian athletes take part.

On Saturday, Belarusian-born Aryna Sabalenka defeated Russia-born Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan to win the Australian Open, becoming the first player under a neutral flag to win a Grand Slam.

“I think everyone still knows I’m a Belarusian player, and that’s it,” Sabalenka said flatly afterwards – holding a glass of champagne – when asked how it felt to win the tournament as a neutral player. (Reuters)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel