“It is because of the athletes,” said Ukrainian skeleton
athlete Vladyslav Heraskevych, who has been living about 100 miles from
Ukraine’s capital of Kyiv, fearful of an attack by Russian troops who invaded
the country earlier this week.
The tipping point to the rapid turn of events Thursday was
“a very, very volatile environment” in the athletes village in Beijing at the
Paralympics, according to the head of that organization.
The International Paralympic Committee was faced with the
very real possibility that athletes might simply pick up and go home before
their Games start Friday. To prevent that, it made an abrupt about-face and
chose to ban the Russian and Belarusian Paralympic teams that, previously, were
being allowed to compete under a neutral flag.
“We did not think that entire delegations, or even teams
within delegations, will withdraw, will boycott, will not participate,” IPC
president Andrew Parsons said.
Rob Koehler, the head of the advocacy group Global Athlete,
called the moment “a clear message to every single athlete about how valuable
and important their voices are for change.”
Early in the week, a cadre of Ukrainian athletes aligned
with Koehler’s group to put out a statement condemning Russia’s invasion and
asking for an immediate ban of Russian and Belarusian athletes from the
Olympics and Paralympics. The list of signers to this letter grew by the hour.
It encompassed several hundred athletes, when adding the individuals who put
their names on the letter to those who were members of the federations and
athlete committees that signed on, as well.
It could have been more, but as the letter poignantly
stated, “it has been a challenge to speak with all athletes from Ukraine as
they are seeking safety in bomb shelters.”
The International Olympic Committee signaled that it heard
the message. It urged all federations to prohibit athletes from those countriesfrom competing. Many took heed of that advice — including ice skating, skiing,
soccer, hockey, basketball and others.
But the Paralympics didn’t do a ban, explaining it would
never hold up in court because of the rulebook. The IOC, with the Olympics in
the rearview mirror, also passed on a ban itself.
That decision cast a different light on a New York Timesreport that China had specifically asked Russia to hold off on any invasion
until the Olympics were over. The countries are allies — their presidents held
a summit the day after the opening ceremony and declared their strategic
partnership had “no limits.” It was no shock that China didn’t want the start
of a war to tarnish its massive sports spectacle.
But the Paralympics bring another 600-plus athletes to
Beijing to compete over 10 days of skiing, skating and sledding. It is one of
the largest gathering of international athletes this side of the Olympics. The
removal of Russia’s flag, without the removal of the country’s athletes was,
Parsons said, the “harshest possible punishment we can hand down within our
constitution and the current IPC rules.”
Those rules, however, took a backseat to reality.
The Latvian and South Korean curling teams said they
wouldn’t take the ice against Russia for an early round match. Other athletes
were considering leaving. The IPC could no longer ignore that possibility.
“It is abundantly clear that athletes forced this decision,
not sport leaders,” said Ali Jawad, a four-time Paralympian who is on the board
of Global Athlete.
The thought of walking away is the most drastic possible
option for athletes who spend their lives training for a day or two of glory at
the biggest spectacle in sports. For decades, none have willingly made that
choice.
The thought of competing in China, with its record of
human-rights abuses, was stomach-turning to many Olympians. But they all chose
to go, in large part because they knew there was no groundswell that wouldfollow them out the door. Boycotting by themselves, they said, would grab
headlines for a day or two, but then the world would simply move on.
Athletes posed a bigger threat than that at the Paras. It
was the latest, most striking show of power in a movement that has included
victories in the fight over Olympic rules on marketing and demonstrations, a
flap over women wearing bikini bottoms for beach handball, pay for women’s
soccer players and more.
“The list goes on and on, and it shows that when athletes
say ‘Things are changing, and they’re changing today,’ that it really can
happen,” Koehler said.
Russia is likely to take this case to the Court of
Arbitration for Sport. CAS, the IOC, World Athletics, the World Anti-Doping
Agency and dozens more in this long “alphabet soup” of sports organizations
have a long history of contorting the rulebooks of international sports to make
them say whatever they want.
One example: While, before the war broke out, Russia
remained largely eligible in most sports despite eight years of rule-breaking
and cover-ups, it was still considered a rogue state in track and field.
It is also, for the time being, persona non grata at the
Paralympics. The credit for that goes to a growing group of athletes who
wouldn’t accept any other option. -AP
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