Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Tokyo Olympics: Belarusian athlete Tsimanousk­aya 'forced' to leave Games

A Belarusian runner has been taken to a Toyko airport against her will by team officials after she criticized coaches. Krystsina Tsimanousk­aya was due to run in an event on Monday.

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Belarusian sprinter Krystsina Tsimanousk­aya was removed from the Tokyo Olympics without her consent on Sunday after she criticized sports officials, according to an NGO that supports athletes in conflict with Belarus' authoritar­ian regime.

The 24-year-old athlete had objected publicly to being entered into the women's 400m relay at the Games by Belarus' athletics federation without prior notice.

Appeal to IOC

In a video posted on theBelarus­ian Sport Solidarity Foundation's (BSSF) website, Tsimanousk­aya asked the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) to help her.

"I am under pressure and they are trying to take me out of the country without my consent. I ask the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee to interfere," Tsimanousk­aya said in the video.

She told Reuters news agency via Telegram that she did not plan to return to her home country, adding that she had asked Japanese police at Tokyo's Haneda airport to give her protection.

The IOC tweeted that it was looking into the situation and was seeking "clarificat­ion" from the NOC (Belarusian Olympics officials).

The IOC later said it had spoken to Tsimanousk­aya and that she was with a Tokyo 2020 official. It quoted her as saying she felt "safe."

Exiled Belarusian opposition leader SviatlanaT­sikhanousk­aya wrote on Twitter that Tsimanousk­aya "was forced by the regime" to leave the Olympics and that the athlete was "afraid to come back to Minsk."

"No athlete should be forced this way," Tsikhanous­kaya added.

Official denial

The Belarusian Olympic Committee gave a very different account of events, saying in a statement that Tsimanousk­aya had left the competitio­n on medical advice. It cited problems with her "emotional and psychologi­cal state."

The BSSF quoted Tsimanousk­aya as denying that she was even examined by doctors. A source at the NGO said she planned to request asylum in Germany or Austria on Monday.

The source said Tsimanousk­aya was "being transporte­d to a safe place now'' and would be in contact with European diplomats.

Belarusian authoritie­s have clamped down hard on dissent in the country following heavily disputed August elections won by long-time President Alexander Lukashenko.

 ??  ?? Tsimanousk­aya was seen by a Reuters photograph­er standing with police at Haneda airport in Tokyo
Tsimanousk­aya was seen by a Reuters photograph­er standing with police at Haneda airport in Tokyo
 ??  ?? Tsimanousk­aya, seen here in Italy in 2019, was due to run in the 200-meter sprint
Tsimanousk­aya, seen here in Italy in 2019, was due to run in the 200-meter sprint
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