The Guardian Australia

IOC bans athletes from taking a knee and podium protests at Tokyo Olympics

- Sean Ingle

Athletes will not be allowed to take a knee or protest against human rights abuses on the podium of Tokyo 2020 or the Beijing 2022 Olympics after twothirds of competitor­s polled by the IOC said they supported a ban remaining in place.The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee had come under sustained pressure to relax Rule 50, which stops athletes from demonstrat­ing on the podium, the field of play or at opening and closing ceremonies, after the global anti-racism protests last year.

However, the IOC will keep the ban after a survey of 3,547 athletes from 185 countries found 70% believed the field of play and official ceremonies were not an appropriat­e place for protest: 67% supported a ban on podium protests. Kirsty Coventry, the IOC Athletes Commission chair, declined to say what would happen to a modern-day Tommie Smith and John Carlos, the American sprinters who raised their fists in a black power salute at the Mexico Games in 1968, but said lawyers were working on a proportion­ate response. “I’m a not a lawyer so that is a little bit out of my realm,” she said. “We’re asking the Legal Affairs Commission commission to come up with a proportion­ate range of different sanctions so that everyone knows, going into going into a Games, what they can and cannot do. ”Athletes could still share their views at press conference­s, but in the IOC Athletes’ Commission document athletes are reminded that freedom of speech “is not absolute” and “may be limited” under certain restrictio­ns, which it said covers the Olympic Games.

Coventry did, however, promise there would be “increased opportunit­ies for athletes expression during the Games”, such as including having a “moment of solidarity against discrimina­tion” at the opening ceremony, which 48% of survey respondent­s rated as “important”. The United States Olym--

pic and Paralympic Committee has said it will not punish athletes for demonstrat­ions such as kneeling or raising a fist.The IOC president, Thomas Bach, promised the Olympic village would be safe for athletes. “In recent months, 340 major events have been staged with 40,000 athletes and none of these events have been a virus spreader and none of these events had the benefit of the vaccine,” he said. “The Olympic village will be a pretty safe place for everyone.”

 ?? Photograph: Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images ?? Athletes will be sanctioned if they take a knee on the podium at Tokyo 2020 or Beijing 2022.
Photograph: Charly Triballeau/AFP/Getty Images Athletes will be sanctioned if they take a knee on the podium at Tokyo 2020 or Beijing 2022.

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