Will Ukraine boycott the Olympics if Russians are allowed to compete?

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, left, and France’s President Emmanuel Macron shake hands in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 16, 2022. The question of if and how Russia competes at the Olympics hangs over the 2024 Paris Summer Games.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, left, and France’s President Emmanuel Macron shake hands in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 16, 2022. The question of if and how Russia competes at the Olympics hangs over the 2024 Paris Summer Games. (Natacha Pisarenko, Associated Press)


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SALT LAKE CITY — Tensions are mounting over the International Olympic Committee's efforts to end the ban on Russian athletes competing in time for the 2024 Summer Games in Paris, with a top Ukrainian sports official threatening a boycott.

It was the IOC that called for Russian and Belarusian athletes to be barred from international competition in February 2022, shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine with assistance from neighboring Belarus.

But with qualifying events for the Paris Olympics starting, the IOC declared in a statement last week, "No athlete should be prevented from competing just because of their passport," and called for the further exploration of "a pathway" for Russian and Belarusian athletes.

That would include requiring them to compete neutrally, with no flags, colors, anthems or other signifiers of their countries, and they could not have actively supported the war against Ukraine.

Russian athletes have competed at several previous Olympics under various names because of sanctions imposed over doping violations, including as the Russian Olympic Committee at the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing.

The IOC's move to reverse the current ban has sparked outrage among Ukrainian leaders.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy started off his nightly address to his nation Friday by slamming the IOC's shift in position, stating it's "obvious that any neutral flag of Russian athletes is stained with blood."

Zelenskyy, who a year before the war had pitched Ukraine to IOC leaders as a site for a future Winter Games, invited IOC President Thomas Bach to visit the frontlines of the battle with Russian troops to "see with his own eyes that neutrality does not exist."

The Ukrainian president did not mention a boycott of the upcoming Olympics, however. That threat came from Ukraine's sports minister, Vadym Guttsait, in a Facebook post Thursday.

"Work is currently underway on further possible steps," Guttsait, who is also president of the National Olympic Committee of Ukraine, said, adding, "If we are not heard, I do not exclude the possibility that we will boycott and refuse to participate in the Olympics."

He pointed out only three national Olympic Committees — from Russia, China and the United States — were invited to participate in a summit convened by the IOC in December with various other sports organizations to discuss the situation.

The Chinese Olympic Committee is backing Russian and Belarusian athletes competing neutrally at this fall's 2023 Asian Games in Hangzhou, China, as a first step toward the Paris Olympics, according to the South China Morning Post.

"Whether they participate or not should be determined based on sports performance, without interference from political and war factors," a Chinese Olympic Committee spokesperson told China's state media.

The U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee has not weighed in on the IOC's new stand. Los Angeles will hold the 2028 Summer Games that follow Paris, and Salt Lake City is bidding to host either the 2030 or 2034 Winter Games.

After the December summit, Susanne Lyons, whose term has since ended as the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee chair, told reporters the "robust discussion" then stopped short of endorsing that Russian and Belarusian athletes be able to compete neutrally at next year's Olympics in Paris.

'Reunification'

"There was an agreement that the IOC could pursue that in the best long-term interest of the movement," Lyons said, describing the role of the Olympic movement as promoting peace through unity in sport.

She called the effort an attempt at "reunification, not necessarily by welcoming the countries back in but by finding a way for their athletes to participate," adding, "we don't want to hold the individual athletes accountable for the actions of their governments."

Lyons said then that "there are countries at war every day and if people begin to kind of decide they want to boycott things, do a tit-for-tat ... very quickly the whole fabric of the Olympic and Paralympic movement falls apart."

The United States and more than 60 other nations boycotted the 1980 Summer Games in Moscow to protest Russia's invasion of Afghanistan. Four years later, the then-Soviet Union led more than a dozen nations in a boycott of the 1984 Summer Games in Los Angeles.

Last year, the U.S. and several other countries sent athletes, but not diplomats, to the Olympics in Beijing to protest China's human rights record. IOC leaders, including Bach, have said the United States should have shown more support for China's Winter Games.

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