Monday, September 15, 2025

One year before Games, Kyiv ‘could drop a threatened boycott’

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KYIV. – Kyiv could drop a threatened boycott of next year’s Paris Olympics if athletes from Russia and Belarus, allies in the war in Ukraine, compete under a neutral flag rather than their national colors, Ukraine’s sports minister told Reuters.

Vadym Huttsait said there had been no decision to soften Ukraine’s stance but indicated Kyiv could be open to reversing a policy that would likely rule out Ukrainian athletes from the summer games.

In April, Ukraine barred its national sports teams from competing in Olympic, non-Olympic and Paralympic events that have competitors from Russia and Belarus – regardless of the flag athletes from those two countries compete under.

“We have started discussions with the presidents of federations, the federations themselves, the sportspeople,” he said referring to the neutral flag proposal for Russian and Belarusian athletes.

“If this happens, will we participate or not? The decision has not been made yet, and therefore there is no softening yet,” he said.

A decree issued by Huttsait late on Wednesday clearly bars Ukrainian nationals from competing against Russian and Belarusian competitors if those athletes are associated with their national flags.

But the decree says nothing about a bar if the athletes compete as neutrals. Rather, it sets down procedures to withdraw Ukrainian competitors should Russian and Belarusian athletes fail to stick to the terms of competing as neutrals, without flags, anthems or national symbols.

Zhan Beleniuk, a wrestler who won Olympic gold in Tokyo and is now a member of Ukraine’s parliament, said the decree opened the way for athletes to take part.

“This opens the way for our athletes to go to international competitions, secure Olympic qualification and prepare for the Games in Paris,” Beleniuk wrote on the Telegram messaging app.

Ukraine in April barred its national sports teams from competing in Olympic, non-Olympic and Paralympic events that have competitors from Russia.

Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine has killed tens of thousands, destroyed cities, uprooted millions, and hammered the economy. Russian troops used Belarus as a staging ground for their abortive attack on Kyiv early on in the invasion.

Some Ukrainian athletes condemned the blanket ban on competing against Russians and Belarusians as a self-inflicted wound that would deprive Kyiv of representation and its sports stars of their careers.

Huttsait, an Olympic gold medal winning fencer decades ago, told Reuters the choice was an extremely difficult one, and that the original decision was still in place but was under discussion.

“We can’t be next to them (the Russians), but on the other hand we are punishing our sportsmen if they cannot compete… they want to go out there, win, and show our flag on the podium.”

Huttsait said his ministry was discussing with Ukrainian sports federations if athletes would be prepared to compete against Russian and Belarusian athletes taking part under a neutral flag.

 

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