Sports Leaders Meet Amid Uncertainty over Russians Playing Olympics 2024

Olympic sports bodies meet Wednesday amid ongoing uncertainty about if and how Russian athletes could return to their competitions ahead of the 2024 Paris Games.

The annual meeting of the Association of Summer Olympic International Federations (ASOIF) comes more than two months after the IOC detailed advice on how individual athletes from Russia and its military ally Belarus could be reintegrated as neutral athletes. Exactly how that neutrality is being defined is not very much clearer now as key qualification events start for the Olympics that open in July next year.

The International Olympic Committee in March advised that some Russians and Belarusians could return in individual events but not team sports, if they had not actively supported the war in Ukraine, and are not contracted to “military or national security agencies.” The IOC also suggested ASOIF and the winter sports umbrella group, AIOWF, could oversee “creating a single independent panel” to run and “harmonize” the neutral status evaluations of hundreds of athletes, coaches and support staff. That has not happened and there is no move Wednesday on the ASOIF agenda in the IOC’s home city of Lausanne toward taking on that complex responsibility.

IOC president Thomas Bach will make a speech to leaders of governing bodies on the 32-sport Paris program who have ultimate control over their own events and who competes in them. Bach and the IOC led calls within days of the invasion of Ukraine in February of last year to banish Russia from international sport, including to protect the security of athletes.

As the war continued and the 2024 Olympics approached, the IOC and Bach started to suggest it was discrimination to exclude all Russians and Belarusians. If approved to compete, the IOC said Russian and Belarusians would be not to be allowed to use their flag, anthem or uniforms in national colors.

ASOIF officials previously cautioned “each sport has different realities,” including where Olympic qualification events are being hosted and the influence of Ukraine’s allies in sports and governments, especially in Europe.

In gymnastics, a top-tier Summer Games sport where Russians excel, a decision on reintegrating them was pushed back to at least July. World championships that are a key qualifier for Paris start Sept. 30 in Antwerp, Belgium.

Track and field took the strongest stance against Russia with World Athletics president Sebastian Coe citing deaths of hundreds of athletes in Ukraine that hardened my resolve.

The International Judo Federation let some Russians compete in Qatar at its worlds this month, an event which was boycotted by Ukraine. The IJF’s honorary president until last year was Vladimir Putin, who is an expert judoka.

The complicated situation in fencing — Bach’s own sport where the long-time governing body president, Kremlin-connected billionaire Alisher Usmanov, stepped aside while under international sanctions saw several Olympic champions from Russia denied neutral status this month. They included the daughter of Russian Olympic Committee president Stanislav Pozdnyakov, who then criticized the neutral eligibility process as a “farce” and a “thinly veiled suspension.” Pozdnyakov also warned of a Russian boycott of events.

Olympic sports officials are currently deliberating on their decisions regarding Russia’s participation. In Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, along with past and present Olympic medalists, strongly advocate for Russia’s exclusion from the upcoming Paris Olympics. Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo has also expressed her opinion that there should be no Russian delegation if the war persists.

Ultimately, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) holds the authority to determine whether Russia will be allowed to compete in the Olympics. IOC President Thomas Bach stated in March that such a decision would be made “at the appropriate time and at its own discretion.”


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