Russia won’t boycott Paris despite ‘unfair’ limits

Olympics

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GENEVA — The Russian Olympic Committee will not boycott this year’s Paris Games, its president said Thursday, despite restrictions on athletes imposed by the International Olympic Committee as punishment for the invasion of Ukraine.

“We will never take the path of boycotting [the Games]. We will always support our athletes,” Stanislav Pozdnyakov, the former Olympic fencer who serves as head of the ROC, said in comments carried by the state RIA news agency. “But we stress that the conditions set by the IOC are illegitimate, unfair and unacceptable.”

The IOC will allow Russians and Belarusians who qualify in their sports for the Paris Games, which run from July 26 to Aug. 11, to take part as neutral athletes without their countries’ flags, emblems or national anthems.

Neutral athletes will compete only in individual sports, and no teams for the two countries will be allowed. Athletes who actively support the war in Ukraine are not eligible, nor are those contracted to the Russian or Belarusian military.

Russia has vigorously protested the restrictions.

Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo told Reuters on Wednesday that she preferred that Russians and Belarusians “don’t come.”

Russians and Belarusians had initially been banned from competing internationally in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that began in February 2022, for which Belarus has been used as a staging ground.

In December, Russian President Vladimir Putin cast a shadow over the participation of Russians at the Paris Games, saying he supported them competing but that the country should ponder whether it should take part at all if the event is designed to portray Russian sport as “dying.”

Russian athletes have already taken part in successive Olympics without their flag or anthem in the wake of major doping scandals.

During the Cold War, the United States boycotted the 1980 Moscow Olympics over the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and the Soviet Union and its allies retaliated with a boycott of the 1984 Los Angeles Games.

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