Bangkok Post

IOC to decide on Russia’s participat­ion

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Tony Estanguet, the head of the Paris Olympic organising committee, said in an interview to mark 500 days before the start of the Games that the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) would have the “last word” on whether athletes from Russian and Belarus will be allowed to compete next year.

Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine last year, assisted by its ally Belarus, there have been calls from across the sporting world either to ban their athletes or have them compete under a neutral flag.

Last week, however, the Internatio­nal Fencing Federation (FIE) became the first Olympic sport to reopen events to athletes from the two nations when it decided to allow fencers to compete in Olympic qualifying events, sparking outrage in Ukraine.

“The internatio­nal federation­s are currently refining their qualificat­ions, to know if Russian or Belarusian athletes will be allowed to participat­e in these qualifying competitio­ns,” Estanguet told AFP.

“And then the IOC, depending on what the internatio­nal federation­s have done, even if Russian or Belarusian athletes have qualified, will be able to say whether it will allow them to participat­e in these Games or not.

“This decision has not been taken. And Paris 2024 is not in a position to decide.”

Estanguet said the priority, however, was not the Olympics but “how the situation can be resolved quickly and how we can best support the Ukrainian people, the Ukrainian athletes”.

The three-time Olympic gold medallist said he had discussed the Russia/ Belarus question with French President Emmanuel Macron.

“Of course there are exchanges between us and the president of the republic, and between the president and the IOC,” Estanguet said.

“Again, it is the IOC that has the last word.”

The 2024 Olympics officially starts on July 26.

In spite of the crisis surroundin­g the ongoing war in Ukraine, Estanguet sounded upbeat as he looked ahead to next year’s Olympics and Paralympic­s in the French capital.

“We feel that all the ingredient­s are in place for the magic of the Games to work,” he said.

“The athletes are already qualifying, the infrastruc­ture continues to advance... fans are readying themselves. Three million tickets were sold in the first phase of sales, in less than three weeks, a record in France.

“The green light is on, we are on schedule, we still have the same ambitions.”

 ?? AFP ?? Tony Estanguet, the 2024 Olympic organising panel chief, poses at the City Hall of Paris this week.
AFP Tony Estanguet, the 2024 Olympic organising panel chief, poses at the City Hall of Paris this week.

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