The Borneo Post

Putin: No Russian Olympics boycott despite ‘political’ ban

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MOSCOW: President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday said Russia would allow athletes to compete at the 2018 Winter Olympics under a neutral flag, after the country was banned from the Games over a state- orchestrat­ed doping programme.

There had been speculatio­n Moscow could boycott the Games entirely after the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee ( IOC) on Tuesday barred the country from competitio­n over what its chief Thomas Bach described as Russia’s “unpreceden­ted attack on the integrity of the Olympic Games and sport”.

Clean Russian athletes would be allowed to compete under an Olympic flag, the IOC said.

“We will certainly not declare any boycott, we will not prevent our Olympians from competing, if they want to take part in a personal capacity,” Putin said after a speech at an automobile plant in Nizhny Novgorod, in which he announced he would run for a fourth presidenti­al term next year.

“The final decision of course must be made by the Olympic team,” he said.

Bach stated that he had “taken note” of Putin’s announceme­nt, the IOC president adding: “I hope and I’m confident that the clean Russian athletes will seize this opportunit­y to participat­e at the 2018 Winter Games to represent a new generation of clean athletes.”

For Putin the ban “looks like an absolutely staged and politicall­y motivated decision”. He repeated denials that any state sponsored doping programme had existed in Russia.

“I feel for those guys – I consider many of them friends rather than just acquaintan­ces. I really feel for them,” he said of the athletes in the Russian team.

Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov earlier Wednesday cautioned against an “emotional” response to the ban.

Russian officials are expected to address the ban in a meeting next Tuesday. Politician­s and athletes earlier reacted with anger and disappoint­ment to the IOC decision.

The head of Russia’s Olympic Committee, Alexander Zhukov, told the IOC that punishing clean athletes was “unjust and immoral”.

Russian media expressed regret at the decision while welcoming the possibilit­y of some athletes participat­ing in South Korea next year, albeit under tight restrictio­ns.

The IOC “cho s e one o f the harshest options it was considerin­g but still not the harshest of all”, which would have been a total ban, wrote Kommersant business daily.

“It ’ s ver y h a r d to t ake accusation­s and punishment­s. But the fate of our athletes and preserving our place in the Olympic fami ly is more important,” wrote the Sport Express daily.

It slammed the decision as “very harsh and in some ways even humiliatin­g for Russia,” citing the life bans on attending the Games for ex- Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, now deputy prime minister.

“Can’t get by without Russia,” the pro- Kremlin Izvestia daily headlined its front page, stressing that “Russian Olympic athletes will defend the honour of the Motherland under any banner.”

Some top spor t s f igures agreed, with ice hockey forward Ilya Kovalchuk telling TASS state news agency: “We must go to the Olympics. Refusing is surrender.”

Pole vault star Yelena Isinbayeva told TASS: “Addressing our athletes, I want to say that they should absolutely not despair and should continue training for the games.”

Some politician­s vented anger, however.

“This is an absolute outrage,” said the last Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, quoted by state RIA Novosti news agency.

“This is sport, damn it!” he added. Nationalis­t politician Vladimir Zhirinovsk­y, leader of the Liberal Democrat ic Party, condemned the decision as “sporting racism, political racism.”

Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrov, writing on his Telegram social networking page, warned that “not one athlete living in Chechnya will participat­e under a neutral flag.” — AFP

We will certainly not declare any boycott, we will not prevent our Olympians from competing, if they want to take part in a personal capacity. Vladimir Putin, Russia President

 ??  ?? Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) Olympic Games executive director, Swiss Christophe Dubi gestures during a press conference during an IOC executive meeting in Lausanne. — AFP photo
Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) Olympic Games executive director, Swiss Christophe Dubi gestures during a press conference during an IOC executive meeting in Lausanne. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Russian Olympic Committee head Alexander Zhukov addresses journalist­s after an extraordin­ary meeting on issues, connected with Russian athletics team and federation, and held by the executive committee of the Russian Olympic Committee in Moscow, Russia...
Russian Olympic Committee head Alexander Zhukov addresses journalist­s after an extraordin­ary meeting on issues, connected with Russian athletics team and federation, and held by the executive committee of the Russian Olympic Committee in Moscow, Russia...

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