• @Tosti@feddit.nl
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    227 months ago

    He is wrong though. And this a-political stance is the opposite of why the Olympics was started. Fight in sports not on the battlefield!

  • @Squizzy@lemmy.world
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    127 months ago

    The Russians have been cheating for how long anyway!? I’d never trust a win from them. Olympics is shite now

  • @knotthatone
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    87 months ago

    I agree with this in principle, but the way they were allowed to compete as the “Russian Olympic Committee” was bullshit. You can’t have a team called “totally not Russia (wink)” and expect that to be a meaningful punishment for the nations leaders

    I think the athletes should only be able to compete as citizens of the world with no reference or acknowledgement of the banned country allowed.

    • @realharo@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      That will never work as long as they’re the only country in that situation. They would need to be mixed with athletes from other unrelated countries for this to make sense.

  • @Armen12@lemm.ee
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    67 months ago

    He’s right, blaming the innocent civilians for something a dictator does is morally and ethically wrong. Germany had to go through all of this before. Other countries guilty of genocide are allowed in the Olympics like China, which is one of the worst offenders and cheats every single time, so why are they allowed?

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    27 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Last week, the IOC said individual athletes from Russia and and its ally Belarus who had qualified for the Paris summer games would be allowed to compete without flags, emblems or anthems of their countries.

    Mr Bach was speaking exclusively to the BBC at the UN Global Refugee Forum in Geneva on Wednesday.

    Olympic sports federations had asked the IOC to allow Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete but with no affiliation to their nations.

    This was despite a number of countries - including the US and UK - calling for an all-out ban amid the ongoing war in Ukraine.

    Ukraine itself suggested it might boycott the games, with President Volodomyr Zelensky saying Russian athletes “cannot be covered up with some pretended neutrality.”

    Mr Bach dismissed the threats of a boycott, saying countries that disagree “are allowed to have different political opinions”.


    The original article contains 362 words, the summary contains 142 words. Saved 61%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!