The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Athletes from Russia, Belarus banned at Winter Games

- By Eddie Pells

Faced with threats of withdrawal­s and growing animosity in the Athletes Village, organizers of the Winter Paralympic­s on Thursday reversed course and expelled athletes from Russia and Belarus. The about-face came less than 24 hours after the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee said it would allow Russians and Belarusian­s to compete when the Games open today, but only as neutral athletes with colors, flags and other national symbols removed because of the invasion of Ukraine.

The Paralympic­s in Beijing, which follow the Winter Olympics, close March 13.

“The war has now come to these Games and behind the scenes many government­s are having an influence on our cherished event,” IPC President Andrew Parsons said Thursday after announcing the ban. “We were trying to protect the Games from war.”

Parsons said the IPC underestim­ated the negative reaction to letting Russians and Belarusian­s compete — even as neutral athletes. The Athletes Village, which Parsons hoped would be a place of harmony, he now depicted as a tinderbox. And it was not only Ukrainians resenting the Russian and Belarusian participat­ion. “We don’t have reports of any specific incidents of aggression or anything like that,” Parsons said. “But it was a very, very volatile environmen­t. ... It was a very rapid escalation which we did not think was going to happen. We did not think that entire delegation­s, or even teams within delegation­s, will withdraw, will boycott, will not participat­e.”

IPC spokesman Craig Spence described a stark change in just over 12 hours from athletes, administra­tors and politician­s. He said the talk was “now we’re thinking of going home. We’re not playing.”

“That threatens the viability of this event. So that’s a huge change,” Spence said. ”The atmosphere in the Village is not pleasant.”

Parsons said he expects legal action from the Russian and Belarusian Paralympic committees, which is what he said he feared Wednesday when he ruled their athletes could compete. The likely place is the Switzerlan­d-based Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport.

The Russian Paralympic Committee called the decision to expel its athletes “baseless” and “illegal.”

“(Russian athletes) have not done anything which could be interprete­d as being involved in the current political complicati­ons,” the RPC said. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov decried the decision, calling it a “disgrace.”

Parsons said he understand­s the disappoint­ment of the 71 Russians and 12 Belarusian­s who will be sent home. He said he did not know how quickly that would happen, particular­ly with severe COVID-19 restrictio­ns in place in China. “No one is happy with the decision but certainly this is the best decision for the Paralympic Games to go ahead,” Parsons said.

The IPC now joins other sports that have imposed blanket bans on Russians and Belarussia­ns.

 ?? THOMAS LOVELOCK/OIS VIA AP ?? Organizers of the Winter Paralympic­s on Thursday reversed course and expelled athletes from Russia and Belarus. The about-face came less than 24 hours after the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee said it would allow Russians and Belarusian­s to compete.
THOMAS LOVELOCK/OIS VIA AP Organizers of the Winter Paralympic­s on Thursday reversed course and expelled athletes from Russia and Belarus. The about-face came less than 24 hours after the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee said it would allow Russians and Belarusian­s to compete.

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