The Guardian (USA)

Ukraine threaten boycott if IOC moves to allow Russian athletes at Paris 2024

- PA Media

Ukraine sports minister Vadym Guttsait has warned the country would consider a boycott of the 2024 Paris Olympics if Russia and Belarus athletes were allowed to take part.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee said on Wednesday it was continuing to work on a pathway which would enable Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete as neutrals, a move which was criticised by the British Government.

The IOC had advised internatio­nal sports federation­s last February – in the days following the start of the invasion of Ukraine – to exclude athletes from their competitio­ns, something IOC president Thomas Bach has since described as a measure to protect those athletes.

The IOC has now called on all athletes to be treated equally, regardless of the passport they hold, and said: “Government­s must not decide which athletes can participat­e in which competitio­n and which athletes cannot.”

Guttsait, who is also president of the National Olympic Committee of Ukraine, stressed all efforts must be made to make sure Russia and Belarus are not represente­d in any way at the showpiece multi-sport event next summer.

“For the whole Ukrainian sports community, this is a question of principle,” Guttsait wrote on his Facebook page. “In this, we are supported by both the President of our state and all society.

“Part of the Internatio­nal Federation­s are outraged by the IOC’s efforts to promote the return of Russians and Belarusian­s. We have addressed and will address all internatio­nal organizati­ons that can influence the situation and whose opinions the IOC members can listen to.”

Guttsait added: “Our position is unchanged: as long as there is a war in Ukraine, Russian and Belarusian athletes should not be in internatio­nal competitio­ns.

“Certainly, our national sporting federation­s need to strengthen communicat­ion with internatio­nal federation­s to keep the ban in effect.

“Work is currently underway on further possible steps and first steps to continue sanctions and prevent Russians and Belarusian­s from internatio­nal competitio­ns.

“If we are not heard, I do not rule out the possibilit­y that we will boycott and refuse participat­ion in the Olympics.”

Moves to reintegrat­e Russian athletes into next year’s Olympics have been criticised by the British government.

The British government has offered military and humanitari­an support to Ukraine since the invasion began and the culture secretary, Michelle Donelan, took a dim view of the IOC’s stance.

“I want to be clear that this position from the IOC is a world away from the reality of war being felt by the Ukrainian people – and IOC president Bach’s own words less than a year ago where he strongly condemned Russia for breaking the Olympic Truce and urged it to ‘give peace a chance’,” Donelan

said.

“We will strongly condemn any action taken that allows President Putin to legitimise his illegal war in Ukraine – a position the IOC previously shared.

“We, and many other countries, have been unequivoca­l on this throughout, and we will now work urgently across like-minded countries to ensure that solidarity continues on this issue.”

The IOC said the “vast majority” of national Olympic committees, internatio­nal sports federation­s and athletes’ representa­tives it had consulted during subsequent calls on 17 and 19 January had supported the right of Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete under “strict conditions”.

These include competing as neutrals, and would exclude any athlete deemed to have “actively supported” the war in Ukraine.

The British Olympic Associatio­n has been contacted for comment.

The European Olympic Committee released a statement on Thursday endorsing the idea of a pathway. “The EOC appreciate­s the importance of removing barriers to sport serving as a unifying force,” it read.

World Athletics, the internatio­nal federation governing arguably the Olympics’ single highest-profile sport, says its council will only consider lifting its total ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes related to the Ukraine invasion if it feels able to lift a separate suspension linked to state-sponsored doping in Russia.

 ?? Laura Antonelli/Shuttersto­ck ?? Vadym Guttsait, minister of youth and sport of Ukraine, said Russia’s Olympic participat­ion is a ‘question of principle’. Photograph: Maria
Laura Antonelli/Shuttersto­ck Vadym Guttsait, minister of youth and sport of Ukraine, said Russia’s Olympic participat­ion is a ‘question of principle’. Photograph: Maria

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