The Herald

Belarus Olympic sprinter lands in Europe after fearing for her life

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A PLANE carrying a Belarusian Olympic sprinter seeking refuge landed in Austria yesterday after she resisted an attempt by her Olympic team’s officials to send her home, where she feared reprisals from the authoritar­ian government.

Krystsina Tsimanousk­aya boarded a plane at Tokyo’s Narita Internatio­nal Airport that left for Vienna, but she was expected to travel on to Poland, which has offered her a humanitari­an visa.

Before leaving Japan, the 24-year-old Tsimanousk­aya said she hoped she could continue her running career but that safety was her immediate priority.

Her husband fled the country quickly this week when he realised that his wife would not be returning to Belarus.

Vienna Airport said the direct flight that Tsimanousk­aya boarded landed at 3.08pm local time.

Vadim Krivosheye­v, an activist with the Belarusian Sport Solidarity Foundation, said Tsimanousk­aya took the flight to Austria instead of Warsaw on the advice of Polish authoritie­s.

“The decision to change the route and fly to Vienna was made by the Polish side for security reasons,” he told The Associated Press.

Tsimanousk­aya was expected to head to Warsaw later yesterday, according to Mr Krivosheye­v.

Her experience at the Tokyo Games became an internatio­nal issue after she accused Belarusian team officials of hustling her to the airport several days ago and trying to put her on a plane to Belarus because she had criticised the team’s management on social media.

The team officials said she would face reprisals back home, she said.

The officials “made it clear that, upon return home, I would definitely face some form of punishment,” Tsimanousk­aya said in a videocall from Tokyo on Tuesday.

“There were also thinly disguised hints that more would await me.”

She added that she believed she would be kicked off Belarus’ national team. “I would very much like to continue my sporting career because I’m just 24, and I had plans for two more Olympics at least,” she said. But “for now, the only thing that concerns me is my safety.” Reached by phone on Tuesday, Dzmitry Dauhaliona­k, the head of Belarus’ delegation at the Summer Olympics, declined comment, saying that he has “no words”.

Tsimanousk­aya’s criticism of how officials were managing her team set off a massive backlash in state-run media in Belarus. The runner said on Instagram that she was put in the 4x400m relay even though she has never raced in the event. She was then barred from competing in the 200m.

The sprinter called on internatio­nal sports authoritie­s on Tuesday “to investigat­e the situation, who gave the order, who actually took the decision that I can’t compete any more”. She suggested possible sanctions against the head coach.

In an interview, Tsimanousk­aya also expressed worry for her parents, who remain in Belarus. Her husband,

Arseni Zdanevich, said he decided to leave the country when Tsimanousk­aya told him she was not coming back.

Belarus was rocked by months of protests after President Alexander Lukashenko was awarded a sixth term in an August 2020 presidenti­al election that the opposition and the West saw as rigged. Authoritie­s responded to demonstrat­ions with a sweeping crackdown that saw more than 35,000 people arrested and thousands beaten by police.

In a show of determinat­ion to stifle dissent at any cost, Belarus authoritie­s diverted a passenger plane that was flying from Greece to Lithuania in May and ordered it to land in the Belarusian capital, where they arrested an opposition journalist on board.

Amid Tsimanousk­aya’s rift with team officials, two other Belarusian athletes announced their intention to stay abroad.

Heptathlet­e Yana Maksimava said she and her husband Andrei Krauchanka, who won silver in the decathlon at the 2008 Beijing

Olympics, would remain in Germany.

“I’m not planning to return home after all the events that happened in Belarus,” Maksimava said on Instagram, adding that “you can lose not just your freedom but also your life” in her homeland.

The authoritar­ian Belarusian president, who led the Belarus National Olympic Committee for almost a quarter of a century before handing over the job to his older son in February, has shown a keen interest in sports, seeing it as a key element of national prestige.

Both Mr Lukashenko and his son were banned from the Tokyo Games by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee.

Western leaders have condemned Tsimanousk­aya’s treatment by Belarusian authoritie­s. US secretary of state Antony Blinken denounced Belarusian officials’ attempt to force Tsimanousk­aya to return to Belarus for exercising free speech as “another act of transnatio­nal repression”.

I would very much like to continue my sporting career because I’m just 24, and I had plans for two more Olympics, at least

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