From the BBC:
“International Olympic Committee suspends Russian Olympic
Committee 'with immediate effect'”
The International Olympic Committee's executive board has
suspended the Russian Olympic Committee "with immediate effect until
further notice". The move comes after the ROC recognised regional
organisations from four Ukrainian territories illegally annexed by Russia since
its full-scale invasion began in 2022. The IOC said last Thursday's recognition
was "a breach of the Olympic Charter because it violates the territorial
integrity of the National Olympic Committee of Ukraine". The suspension
means the ROC "is no longer entitled to operate as a National Olympic
Committee" and "cannot receive any funding from the Olympic
movement". Olympic Councils from the regions of Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson
and Zaporizhzhia had been recognised by the ROC.
The IOC added it would decide whether Russian athletes could
compete as neutrals at Paris 2024 "at the appropriate time". In
response, the ROC called the suspension "another counterproductive
decision with obvious political motivations". The IOC did not initially
sanction the ROC following the invasion, but Russia has been banned from
competing as a nation in athletics since November 2015 after state-sponsored
doping was uncovered.
Russia's doping suspension was lifted in March but the World
Athletics Council ruled the nation would remain banned "for the
foreseeable future" because of the war in Ukraine. The IOC has been under
consistent pressure to ban Russian and Belarusian athletes from competing even
under a neutral flag since the invasion began. But in March it told sporting
federations they should allow athletes from those countries to compete as neutrals.
Ukraine has threatened to boycott next year's Games in Paris
if a full ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes is not upheld. "This is
an important decision," said Andriy Yermak, head of Ukraine's presidential
office, adding that "sports cannot be out of politics" and accusing
Russia of using "athletes as propaganda".
Currently, IOC sanctions mean no international sporting events
can be organised in the territory of either Russia or its ally Belarus, while
the flags, national anthems or any other national symbol of both countries must
not be used. Earlier this week European football's governing body Uefa
abandoned plans to reinstate Russian Under-17 teams into next year's youth
European Championships following backlash from a variety of national football
associations. In March the All England Club allowed Russian and Belarusian
tennis players to compete at Wimbledon, lifting a ban it imposed a year
earlier.
^ Good job IOC! ^
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