Hartford Courant

Ukraine ready for a boycott

- By Hanna Arhirova

KYIV, Ukraine — With next year’s Paris Olympics on the horizon and Russia’s invasion looking more like a prolonged conflict, Ukraine’s sports minister on Friday renewed a threat to boycott the games if Russia and Belarus are allowed to compete and said Kyiv would lobby other nations to join.

Such a move could lead to the biggest rift in the Olympic movement since the Cold War era.

No nation has declared it will boycott the 2024 Summer Games. But Ukraine won support from Poland, the Baltic nations and Denmark, who pushed back against an Internatio­nal Olympic Committee plan to allow delegation­s from Russia and ally Belarus to compete in Paris as “neutral athletes,” without flags or anthems.

“We cannot compromise on the admission of Russian and Belarusian athletes,” said Ukrainian Sports Minister Vadym Huttsait, who also heads its national Olympic committee, citing attacks on his country, the deaths of its athletes and the destructio­n of its facilities.

A meeting of his committee did not commit to a boycott but approved plans to try to persuade global sports officials in the next two months — including discussion of a boycott.

Huttsait added: “As a last option, but I note that this is my personal opinion, if we do not succeed, then we will have to boycott the Olympic Games.”

Paris will be the final Olympics under outgoing IOC head Thomas Bach, who is looking to his legacy after a tenure marked by disputes over Russia’s status — first over widespread doping scandals and now over the war in Ukraine. Bach’s views were shaped when he was an Olympic gold medalist in fencing and his country, West Germany, took part in the U.s.-led boycott of the 1980 Olympics in Moscow over the Soviet invasion of Afghanista­n. He has condemned that decision ever since.

Russia has cautiously welcomed the IOC’S decision to give it a path to the Olympics but demands it drop a condition that would leave out those athletes deemed to be “actively supporting the war in Ukraine.”

Russian Olympic Committee head Stanislav Pozdnyakov, who was a teammate of Ukraine’s Huttsait at the 1992 Olympics, called that aspect discrimina­tory. The IOC, which previously recommende­d excluding Russia and Belarus from world sports on safety grounds, now argues it cannot discrimina­te against them based on citizenshi­p. The leaders of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania urged the IOC to ban Russia and said a boycott was a possibilit­y.

“I think that our efforts should be on convincing our other friends and allies that the participat­ion of Russian and Belarusian athletes is just wrong,” Estonian Prime Minister Kaja Kallas said. “So boycotting is the next step.”

The IOC said in a statement that “this threat of a boycott only leads to further escalation of the situation, not only in sport, but also in the wider context. It is regretful that politician­s are misusing athletes and sport as tools to achieve their political objectives.”

It added bluntly: “Why punish athletes from your country for the Russian government starting the war?”

 ?? THIBAULT CAMUS/AP ?? Mayor of Marseille Benoit Payan, center, raises the Olympic flag with Paris 2024 president Tony Estanguet, center right, Friday in southern France.
THIBAULT CAMUS/AP Mayor of Marseille Benoit Payan, center, raises the Olympic flag with Paris 2024 president Tony Estanguet, center right, Friday in southern France.

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