Arab News

IOC calm over Games appeal

- ARAB NEWS

LONDON: The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) said it was not worried about an expected ruling from the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS) expected today on whether 32 Russian athletes should be allowed to compete at the Winter Games starting this week.

As many as 32 Russian athletes filed yet more appeals with CAS seeking spots in the games. The 32 failed to pass IOC vetting and were not invited.

“We’re not fearful in any way,” IOC spokesman Mark Adams said.

“We wait for the decision (today). We’re very confident with the stance we’ve taken.”

The IOC expects 168 Russian athletes who have been deemed “clean” to participat­e in the games under the banner of “Olympic Athletes from Russia,” absent of any national flags, uniforms or national logos.

The contentiou­s issue of the Russian ban, and the way it was handled by the IOC, threatens to overshadow the games themselves with 3,000 athletes expected to compete.

The sense that the story refuses to go away was only added to as Russia’s Olympic Athletes Commission expressed “huge disappoint­ment” over the IOC’s decision not to invite to Pyeongchan­g 15 Russian athletes and staff whose life bans for doping were lifted.

The IOC ruled on Monday that 13 Russian athletes and two exathletes now working as support staff will not be invited to the Pyeongchan­g Winter Games despite having their life bans for doping removed last week by CAS.

The IOC has barred Russia from the Pyeongchan­g Olympics, which open on Friday, over a widespread doping conspiracy. But 169 Russians who have passed strict anti-doping protocols will compete under a neutral flag as Olympic Athletes from Russia.

“With a huge disappoint­ment, the members of ROC’s Athletes’ Commission have found out about decision of IOC’s Invitation Review Panel not to invite 13 Russian athletes and 2 coaches fully acquitted by (the CAS) to 2018 Winter Olympics,” the commission statement said.

“It’s surprising that IOC Commission makes its decisions on the basis of some additional, suspicious, and anonymous informatio­n and accounts of one single fraudster,” the commission said, referring to whistleblo­wer Grigory Rodchenkov, who is the source of revelation­s on Moscow’s statespons­ored doping.

The Russian athletes’ statement said that they have supported the IOC statement “that it’s necessary to respect rights of clean athletes.”

However, the commission said that the “massive denial for clean Russian athletes violates the principle of equality and contests efficiency of justice.”

“Dreams of athletes willing to participat­e in Olympics who have fairly won the right for it are being destroyed, and irreparabl­e damage is being caused to basic ideals, values of Olympism,” it said.

 ??  ?? IN THE SPOTLIGHT: ICO chief Thomas Bach and Viktor Ahn (inset), the speed skating star and one of the Russians barred from the Winter Games set to start on Friday in South Korea. (AFP)
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: ICO chief Thomas Bach and Viktor Ahn (inset), the speed skating star and one of the Russians barred from the Winter Games set to start on Friday in South Korea. (AFP)

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