Calgary Herald

Russian athletes may take Asian route to 2024 Olympics

-

SWITZERLAN­D Russia could return to some internatio­nal sports events and Olympic qualifiers by competing as part of Asia rather than Europe.

Internatio­nal Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach welcomed a “creative” plan Friday to allow athletes from Russia and its ally Belarus to join competitio­ns in Asia after more than nine months of isolation from most Olympic sports following the invasion of Ukraine.

The statement did not directly address whether Russia and Belarus can send teams to the 2024 Olympics in Paris, but a move from Europe to Asia offers a potential way for Russian athletes to compete in continenta­l events, which serve as qualifiers for the Games. Qualifying in some sports is already underway.

“Something which few believed in even recently could soon become reality,” Russian Olympic Committee president Stanislav Pozdnyakov wrote on the Telegram app. He predicted Russian athletes could be back in Olympic qualifiers “in the near future.”

The IOC recommende­d on Feb. 28 — four days after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began — that Russian and Belarusian athletes should be excluded from competitio­n, citing concerns over safety and the integrity of competitio­ns. Most Olympic sports followed its lead and imposed bans.

The Olympic Summit, a conference hosted by the IOC and chaired by Bach, agreed Friday that the IOC will “lead the further exploratio­n” of an initiative from the Olympic Council of Asia to allow Russia and Belarus to compete there, according to a statement. Consultati­ons are planned with sports federation­s, athletes and national sports bodies.

Bach “thanked the OCA for its creative initiative,” the statement on the IOC website said. Russia has territory across Europe and Asia but is traditiona­lly considered part of Europe for the purposes of sports events.

“In the course of the debate, the acting president of the Olympic Council of Asia stated that, on the Asian continent, the reasons for the protective measures no longer exist,” the IOC statement said.

“The OCA offered to facilitate the participat­ion of athletes from Russia and Belarus in competitio­ns in Asia under its authority, while respecting the sanctions in place.”

The IOC draws a distinctio­n between what it calls “sanctions” such as preventing Russia from hosting sports events and displaying national symbols in competitio­ns, and the “protective measures” of excluding Russian athletes.

Bach said on Wednesday his organizati­on preferred not to exclude Russian and Belarusian athletes but had to because, when it did so in February, national government­s were seeking to impose their own restrictio­ns.

Sports federation­s aren't obliged to follow IOC recommenda­tions and some may keep restrictio­ns on Russia and Belarus. World Athletics president Seb Coe said last week that Russia must “get out of Ukraine” before it is readmitted to track and field. Coe was on the invite list for the Olympic Summit but was listed on Friday as having been “excused.”

The IOC has allowed Russian athletes at the Olympics before without the country's flag or anthem. A decade of doping disputes led to the Russian team being known as Olympic Athletes from Russia or the Russian Olympic Committee for three consecutiv­e Winter and Summer Olympic Games.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada