Stabroek News

IOC and Games cannot be referees in political disputes - Bach

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(Reuters) - The Olympic Games and its ruling body, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, cannot be referees in global political disputes, its president Thomas Bach said on Wednesday, defending the IOC’s plans to includes Russian and Belarusian athletes at the Paris 2024 Games. Speaking at a political forum, Bach said the Games should stay away from politics otherwise they would lose their uniting powers, citing examples of past boycotts in the 1970s and 1980s.

“If politics decides who can take part in a competitio­n then sport and athletes become tools of politics. It is then impossible for sport to transfer its uniting powers,” Bach said in his speech.

“We must be politicall­y neutral but not apolitical. We know well that politics rules the world. We know well that our decisions have political implicatio­ns and we have to include that in our thinking,” he said. “But we should not make the mistake to raise ourselves to referees of political disputes because we will be crushed by these political powers.”

The IOC issued sanctions against Russia and Belarus following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year but is now reluctant to exclude their athletes from the Olympics entirely for fear of a return to the boycotts of the Cold War era.

It set out a pathway in January for competitor­s from Russia and Belarus to earn Olympic slots through Asian qualifying and to compete as neutral athletes in Paris next year.

Neutral athletes are not considered to be representi­ng their nations and their successes are not accompanie­d by the flying of flags or playing of national anthems.

Some federation­s have since readmitted Russians and Belarusian­s in competitio­ns but there is also considerab­le opposition to the IOC’s plans. “Ukraine wants, and this is a direct quote ‘the total isolation of all Russians’,” Bach said, as some people in the audience applauded.

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