Decision to allow Russian athletes at Paralympics draws backlash

3 Mar 2022 • 3:00 PM MYT
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Decision to allow Russian athletes at Paralympics draws backlash

BEIJING − Russian athletes were cleared yesterday to compete at the Winter Paralympics that open this week under the shadow of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine but the decision by event organisers was met with an immediate backlash.

The International Paralympic Committee (IPC) held a meeting and posted a brief statement saying athletes from Russia as well as Belarus, which hosted troops for the invasion, would be allowed to compete as “neutrals”.

It came after the International Olympic Committee urged sporting federations across the world to exclude athletes from the two countries.

“They will compete under the Paralympic flag and not be included in the medal table,” the IPC said.

President Andrew Parsons said it was a difficult time for the world and the Paralympic movement but he urged competitors to treat the “neutral athletes as they would any other athletes”.

“Unlike their respective governments, these athletes and officials are not aggressors,” Parsons told reporters in Beijing.

But Germany’s top Paralympic official said late yesterday the decision lacked courage and called it “bullshit”.

“It’s a dark day for the Paralympic movement,” the country’s Paralympic Committee president Friedhelm Julius Beucher told AFP in China’s Zhangjiakou, which will host the cross-country skiing, biathlon and para-snowboard events.

Beucher said Ukrainian athletes at the Games would be phoning home each day asking loved ones, “are you still alive, are you okay?”

Britain’s culture secretary Nadine Dorries also took a dim view of the decision.

“I am extremely disappointed in the IPC − this is the wrong decision and I call on them to urgently reconsider,” she said on Twitter.

“They must join the rest of the world in condemning this barbaric invasion by banning Russian and Belarusian athletes from competing.”

But Parsons said the IPC’s decision “is the harshest possible punishment we can do within the framework of our rules”. 

He added that the decision had not been unanimous within the committee but he would not disclose a breakdown of the voting.

The IPC will host an extraordinary general assembly this year to vote on whether to make compliance with the Olympic Truce a membership requirement and whether to suspend or terminate the membership of the Russian and Belarusian Paralympic committees. 

It will not hold any events in Russia or Belarus until further notice, it added.

Parsons declined to say whether the IPC would take action against any athletes protesting at the Games, saying it would act on a case-by-case basis.

Much of the sports world has reacted in solidarity with Ukraine. 

Fifa kicked Russia out of the 2022 World Cup while rugby’s world governing body has banned Russia and Belarus from all international events “until further notice”.

Russian President Vladimir Putin − an accomplished judoka − was also suspended as honorary head of the International Judo Federation. 

With its civilian airspace closed, half a million refugees fleeing to neighbouring countries and Russian troops closing in on Kyiv, getting Ukraine’s Paralympians to Beijing was expected to be a difficult task.

But Parsons confirmed the team’s safe arrival yesterday.

“I’m delighted to say that just hours ago, the Ukrainian team − consisting of 20 athletes and nine guides − arrived safely here in Beijing,” he told reporters.

The Eastern European country has punched above its weight in previous Paralympic winter events with frequent podium finishes in the biathlon and ski events.

The delegation took home 22 medals in 2018 − including seven golds − gaining the sixth spot on the world tally. – AFP, March 3, 2022