Russia rages against Olympic chiefs, accuses them of ‘neo-Nazism’
Sign up now: Get the biggest sports news in your inbox
The IOC has barred athletes from both Russia and Belarus from taking part in the opening ceremony of the 2024 Paris Olympics on July 26, amid the Kremlin's invasion of neighbouring Ukraine.
PHOTO: AFP
Follow topic:
MOSCOW - Russia launched a furious tirade at the International Olympic Committee on March 20, arguing the IOC’s restrictions on Russian athletes and its criticism of the Moscow-organised Friendship Games amounted to “neo-Nazism”.
The IOC on March 19 barred athletes from both Russia and Belarus from taking part in the opening ceremony
“These decisions demonstrate how far the IOC has moved away from its stated principles and slipped into racism and neo-Nazism,” Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said, in a briefing.
The IOC suspended Russia from the 2024 Games in 2023, but gave the green light for its athletes to compete as neutrals as long as they did not actively support the Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine.
This neutral status forces Russian athletes to “renounce any association with their homeland, with their citizenship, with their history, culture and people,” Ms Zakharova argued.
“The IOC’s decisions are wrongful, unjust and unacceptable,” she said.
“We are outraged by the unprecedented discriminatory conditions imposed by the International Olympic Committee on Russian athletes.”
‘Intimidation’
Russia’s fury comes a day after the IOC issued a strongly-worded statement accusing the Kremlin of “politicising sport” by planning to hold its own Friendship Games.
Announced several months ago, the first edition of the Summer Friendship Games is “planned to be held in Moscow and Yekaterinburg” next September, the IOC said, with the first winter edition to take place in 2026 in Sochi, the venue for the highly controversial 2014 Winter Olympics.
The IOC called on the sporting world and governments invited by Moscow “to reject any participation in and support of” the event, but stopped short of sanctioning those who take part.
The Kremlin warned the IOC against such sanctions on March 20.
“This is intimidation of the athletes. It completely undermines the credibility of the IOC,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
Tensions between Moscow and the Olympic body had already been running high for years over a long-running doping scandal which saw Russians barred from competing under their own flag in the 2020 Tokyo Games.
The IOC accused Moscow in the same statement of “total disrespect for the global anti-doping standards and the integrity of competitions”, citing concerns made last week by the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) in light of the institutionalised doping at the Sochi Winter Olympics 10 years ago.
Athletes from Russia and Belarus have faced sanctions from a myriad of sports since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine
Over the past year, a number of Olympic sports have eased restrictions, allowing athletes from both countries to return to competition under certain conditions.
Sportspeople from Russia and Belarus will compete in Paris as “Individual Neutral Athletes”.
But competitors from both countries remain banned from the sport of athletics.
Meanwhile, Europe’s highest rights body on March 20 called for Russian and Belarusian athletes to be banned from the Paris Olympics.
President of the Council of Europe Theodoros Rousopoulos said it would be “an insult to Ukrainian athletes” if competitors from the two nations were allowed to participate.
“Should athletes from a country that has invaded another participate in the Olympic Games?“ he asked.
“In other words: can we condemn Russia for bombing Ukrainian civilians, kidnapping children, torturing prisoners, carrying out massacres – and then applaud its athletes?” AFP

