The Independent on Saturday

’IOC can’t stop athletes taking a knee in Tokyo’

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BRITAIN’S Olympic track cycling gold medallist Callum Skinner said the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) would not be able to stop athletes protesting during this year's Tokyo Games.

IOC Rule 50 forbids any kind of "demonstrat­ion or political, religious or racial propaganda" in venues and any other Olympic area. On Wednesday, the Games body concluded the rule should be maintained following a consultati­on process that started in June 2020 and involved over 3500 athletes.IOC Athletes' Commission chief Kirsty Coventry, who led the review of Rule 50, said the majority of athletes they spoke to in the consultati­on process supported it.

Against the backdrop of the 'Black Lives Matter' movement protesting racial injustice, however, there have been growing calls for a change to that rule that would allow athletes to protest.

Skinner, who won gold in the team sprint at Rio 2016, told the Times that the IOC seemed "intent on exercising control when they don't have any. If an athlete wants to take the knee, they will take the knee."

Skinner, who retired in 2019 and is a member of the Global Athlete group, which aims to "create positive change in world sport", said standing up for equality was not a political act. "People get frustrated by 'Black Lives Matter' because they see it as a political movement, but at its core it's fighting for equality and that is something the Olympics should 100% stand behind," he added.

The Tokyo Olympic, delayed by Covid 19, kick off on July 23. | Reuters

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