EuroNews (English)

Baltic leaders threathen to boycott Olympic Games if Russians compete

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Euronews

The prime ministers of the Baltics urged the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee on Friday to ban Russian athletes from next year’s Paris Games because of the war in Ukraine, saying a boycott was a possibilit­y.

Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas said athletes from her country could be put in a situation where they are competing against Russians, claiming many of them “are soldiers.”

“I think that our efforts should be on convincing our other friends and allies that the participat­ion of

Russian and Belarusian athletes is just wrong," Kallas said, adding in Russia's ally in the war. "So boycotting is the next step. I think people will understand why this is necessary.”

Her Latvian counterpar­t, Arturs Krisjanis Karins, called it “morally reprehensi­ble” to allow Russians to compete at the Olympics.

Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania border Russia and gained independen­ce from the Soviet Union in 1991. They have been strong supporters of Ukraine, another former Soviet republic, in the war.

Ukraine is steadfastl­y opposed to letting Russians compete.

On Wednesday, the Latvian Olympic Committee threatened to boycott the Paris Games if Russian athletes are allowed and called on other countries to form a coalition to pressure internatio­nal sports bodies. It was the first national Olympic body other than Ukraine to threaten to boycott rather than compete against Russia.

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Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda on Friday expressed support for the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee’s decision to bar Russian and Belarusian athletes from internatio­nal competitio­ns, the Baltic News Service reported.

“We support the IPC’s decisions to suspend the NPCs and to ban athletes from the countries, which started the unprovoked and unjustifie­d war in Europe and violate internatio­nal law and human rights, from competing,” Nauseda said after meeting with IPC president Andrew Parsons in Vilnius. “The internatio­nal sports community cannot turn a blind eye to war crimes.”

The IOC is pushing sports fed-erations to allow any Russians or Belarusian­s who have not been “actively supporting the war in Ukraine” and argues it would be discrimina­tory to ban athletes based on their citizenshi­p alone. The Olympic body wants to let them compete as “neutral athletes.”

“Russian sportsmen will not fake it under a neutral flag because there is no neutrality in the current world,” Lithuanian Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte said.

Other national Olympic sports bodies, including the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee, back the IOC's efforts to find a path for Russians to compete.

 ?? ?? The Mayor of Marseille Benoit Payan, raises the Olympic flag with the Head of the Paris 2024 Olympics, Tony Estanguet, after a press conference at Marseille City Hall.
The Mayor of Marseille Benoit Payan, raises the Olympic flag with the Head of the Paris 2024 Olympics, Tony Estanguet, after a press conference at Marseille City Hall.

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