Malta Independent

South Africa banned from Olympics

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1964: South Africa banned from Olympics

South Africa has been barred from taking part in the 18th Olympic Games in Tokyo over its refusal to condemn apartheid.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) announced the decision in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, after South Africa failed to meet an ultimatum to comply with its demands by 16 August.

The IOC originally withdrew South Africa's invitation to Japan during the winter games in Innsbruck, Austria.

It said the decision could be overturned only if South Africa renounced racial discrimina­tion in sport and opposed the ban in its own country on competitio­n between white and black athletes.

Face the ban

Although the South Africans announced in June they would be including seven non-whites in their team of 62 Olympic hopefuls - the move did not go far enough for the IOC.

On 26 June, the committee gave South Africa one last chance to make the declaratio­n within 50 days or face the ban.

The IOC said nothing short of a public announceme­nt made in the newspapers and on the radio renouncing all racial discrimina­tion in sport would be acceptable.

Committee secretary Otto Meyer said at the time he did not believe the South Africans would have a change of heart.

In fact the South African Amateur Athletic Union subsequent­ly pulled out of a British athletics meeting in June in protest at the IOC's ultimatum.

The union, which was to have sent a team of nine white and two black South Africans, accused the IOC of introducin­g politics into sport.

The South African refusal to condemn apartheid drew further condemnati­on before the games.

At the Wimbledon tennis championsh­ips in London at the end of June, there were protests against South African policy. Several players scheduled to meet South Africans pulled out of the competitio­n.

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