Published By: Ritayan Basu
Last Updated: March 28, 2023, 15:54 IST
International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach (Reuters)
International Olympic Committee chief Thomas Bach has been eager to discover a “pathway” for athletes from Russia and Belarus to on the very least strive and qualify for the 2024 Olympics in Paris
More than 300 lively and former fencers have referred to as on Olympic chief Thomas Bach to uphold the ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes when he and the decision-making board of the International Olympic Committee meet on Tuesday.
Bach, who received Olympic fencing crew gold in 1976, has been eager to discover a “pathway” for athletes from Russia and Belarus to at the very least try and qualify for the 2024 Olympics in Paris.
Athletes from both countries have faced differing sanctions from a multitude of sports since Russia invaded Ukraine in February last year.
The FIE, the world fencing body, ruled earlier this month to allow Russian and Belarusian fencers to return to international competition, becoming the first Olympic sport to reopen its events to athletes from the two countries.
In a hard-hitting letter, the fencers including 2020 Olympic women’s foil champion Lee Kiefer of the United States accuse Bach and the interim president of their federation, Emmanuel Katsiadakis, of prioritising Russians ahead of Ukrainians.
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion has wreaked havoc on Ukrainian sports with “232 athletes being killed, 343 sport facilities being destroyed, 40,000 athletes forced abroad, and 140,000 young athletes left without sport facilities”, they wrote.
“With full disregard for athletes’ voices, you could have permitted each Russia and Belarus again into FIE competitions, in addition to a suspected match hosted on Russian soil.
“This is an obvious breach of the IOC’s place that ‘no international sport events are to be organized or supported by an IF or NOC in Russia or Belarus’ and as soon as once more exposes Russian pursuits outweighing the voice and rights of athletes, particularly these from Ukraine.”
‘Putin’s war chest’
The IOC have said it is hoped Russian and Belarus athletes can compete in Paris as neutral athletes — without any national emblem and dressed in white.
However, the fencers highlight how it is hard to separate the Russian athletes from the state.
Russian fencers are a traditional powerhouse in the sport — in 2020 Russian women won three of the six titles on offer and three minor medals whilst the men won two silver team medals.
“Not only have these athletes been encouraged to fight in the war by the Russian Olympic Committee, with a large majority of them holding military and law enforcement positions, but they are also beneficiaries of state funding -– drawing their pay from Putin’s war chest and thus making any separation between the state and the athlete implausible,” the fencers wrote.
The fencers mentioned even when Russian athletes had been to compete as neutrals and win medals Putin would nonetheless use them as propaganda instruments.
“Athletes had been and shall be instrumentalized for Putin’s propaganda,” they said.
“Competing under a neutral flag has not proven to be a suitable sanctioning instrument in the past and is not suitable now.”
The fencers mentioned that till Russia withdraws from Ukraine a complete ban have to be in place on athletes competing.
“We name on you in your management capability of the IOC to uphold your advisable suspensions of the Russian and Belarusian Fencing Federations and National Olympic Committees and make sure the FIE adheres to your pointers,” they said.
“Any suspension must reject the notion of neutrality and include the banning of all Russian and Belarusian athletes from international sport, including hosting events, qualifying for, and competing at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games until Russia withdraws completely from Ukrainian territory.”
Their stance echoes that of World Athletics, which final week renewed its blanket ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes.
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