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Olympic head slams criticism of planned Russian reintegration

 Olympic head slams criticism of planned Russian reintegration

Thomas Bach accuses European governments of 'double standards' on ongoing wars

A man in a suit looks ahead as the Olympic flag is shown in the background.
International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach criticized European governments who have pushed back against his organization's plan to allow some Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete as neutrals on Thursday. (Denis Balibouse/Pool Photo via The Associated Press)

IOC president Thomas Bach also suggested those governments — which seemed to include his own home country Germany — had "double standards" for focusing on athletes from countries involved in just one of about 70 wars and armed conflicts ongoing in the world.

Bach detailed IOC advice on Tuesday to individual Olympic sports bodies of conditions by which they could decide to approve individual Russians or Belarusians to compete as neutral athletes while continuing a ban from team sports.

The IOC said sports should exclude athletes who have military links, though Bach clarified on Thursday this likely should not apply to those who did one year of mandatory service.

"We have taken note of some negative reactions by some European governments in particular," Bach said at a news conference after an IOC executive board meeting.

Germany sports minister Nancy Faeser said Tuesday that the IOC's shift from its position one year ago to exclude all athletes and teams from Russia and Belarus was "a slap in the face of Ukrainian athletes."

"Those who let the warmonger Russia use international competitions for its propaganda are damaging the Olympic idea of peace and international understanding," Faeser said, echoing previous comments from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and allies including Poland.

'Willful ignorance

Ukraine's foreign ministry said Thursday that the IOC "avoids the topic of [Russian] war crimes" and showed "willful ignorance of the war reality."

Bach responded it was deplorable that some governments "do not want to respect the majority within the Olympic movement and of all the stakeholders nor the autonomy of sport which they are praising and requesting from other countries."

"It's deplorable that these governments don't address the question of double standards with which we have been confronted," the German lawyer said.

"We have not seen a single comment from them about their attitude about the participation of athletes whose countries are involved in the other 70 wars and armed conflicts in the world."

The Paris Olympics is the fifth straight Summer or Winter Games since the steroid-tainted 2014 Sochi Olympics where Russia has faced calls to be excluded or must compete as a neutral team without national symbols such as the flag and anthem. The previous sanctions were because of state-backed doping and cover-ups.

Still, criticism of sports officials was only hardening their stance against lawmakers, Bach suggested, and "strengthened the unity."

"It cannot be up to the governments to decide which athletes can participate in which competition," he said.

The final decision is up to individual sports bodies

The final decision on which Russian and Belarusian teams can compete in international events, including qualification for the Paris Olympics, is for the governing bodies of individual sports.

One sports body to follow Bach on Thursday was the International Table Tennis Federation which said Russians and Belarusians could compete again as neutrals as soon as May.

The ITTF cited the example of "ping pong diplomacy," when American table tennis players traveled to China in 1971 to play exhibition games which helped thaw relations between their countries.

However, World Athletics said last week it will continue it's more than year-long exclusion for "the foreseeable future."

Two IOC members with connections to the Russian military — including women's pole vault world record holder Yelena Isinbayeva, who has an army rank — have had their status referred to the Olympic body's ethics commission for evaluation, Bach said.

The IOC ethics panel chaired by former U.N. Secretary-general Ban Ki-moon has no power to impose sanctions and can only recommend actions to the Bach-chaired executive board.

Ban visited Bucha in Ukraine last August and called the mass killings there by Russian forces a "horrendous atrocity" and a crime against humanity.

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