Sochi 2014: Ukraine Paralympic chief says it will quit Games if Russia invades

Ukraine's Paralympic chief, Valeriy Sushkevich, said on Friday, March 7, 2014, his team would quit the Winter Paralympic Games if Russia invaded his home country, and that he hoped the competition would be able to spread peace instead. -- PHOTO: AFP
Ukraine's Paralympic chief, Valeriy Sushkevich, said on Friday, March 7, 2014, his team would quit the Winter Paralympic Games if Russia invaded his home country, and that he hoped the competition would be able to spread peace instead. -- PHOTO: AFP

SOCHI (REUTERS) - Ukraine's Paralympic chief, Valeriy Sushkevich, said on Friday his team would quit the Winter Paralympic Games if Russia invaded his home country, and that he hoped the competition would be able to spread peace instead.

Russia is holding the Games in the Black Sea resort of Sochi at a time when it is being criticises for its actions in Ukraine's southern region of Crimea, where the West blames Russia for seizing military and government institutions.

Moscow says the armed men in Crimea are members of local self-defence units. While Russian President Vladimir Putin says he has the right to send in troops to defend Russian compatriots there but that so far he sees no need to do so.

"If there is an escalation of the conflict, intervention on the territory of our country, God forbid the worst, we would not be able to stay here, we would go," Sushkevich told a news conference.

Many countries have cancelled plans to send government ministers and members of royal families to the Games because of events in Crimea, where the parliament has voted to join Russia and hold a referendum on its status on March 16.

Sushkevich said he had a "calm and reserved" conversation with Mr Putin.

"I repeated my one request, the one and most important request, that before and during (the Games) there will be peace," he said, adding that the Russian leader answered that he would think about his words.

"The Ukrainian team, as well as hoping for good results, came with colossal hopes for peace, peace in our country, in Europe, in the world. I am sure... that the majority is aware of the colossal danger to peace and the right of every person to have peace in the current situation."

Mr Putin told a news conference on Tuesday that any boycott of the Paralympics over Ukraine would be "the height of cynicism".

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