Athletes from Russia and Belarus will not be able to participate in the opening ceremony of Paris 2024
The IOC announced that neutral athletes will not be part of the parade and announced that it has not yet made a decision on the closing ceremony. In addition, they confirmed that so far 12 Russians and seven Belarusians have qualified for the Olympic Games.
There will be no Russians in the World Aquatic Championship starting next week
Despite having the possibility of competing as neutrals, there are no Russian representatives registered for the World Aquatic Championship. The trend, a few days before the start of 2024, is that they will not participate in the Olympic Games under the conditions imposed by World Aquatics and recommended by the International Olympic Committee (IOC).
The International Gymnastics Federation authorized the first neutrals: they are all from Belarus, there are no Russians
In compliance with what was announced in July of last year, the governing organization of gymnastics began publishing this week the athletes who meet the neutrality requirements required to return to competing internationally. The Tokyo 2020 Olympic champion in trampoline gymnastics, Ivan Litvinovich, and the bronze medalist in rhythmic gymnastics, Alina Harnasko, are the two most resonant figures to receive the green light, although it’s not clear how they could qualify for the Paris Olympics.
Solitario gol le da triunfo a Belarús sobre Kosovo
Con lo justo, Belarús venció a Andorra 1 a 0 en el estadio Szusza Ferenc Stadion
Pese a doblete de Max Ebong, Belarús empató con Suiza
Belarús y Rumania igualaron sin goles en el marcador
Con un solo tanto, Israel derrotó a Belarús en el estadio Bloomfield Stadium
Andorra y Belarús empataron sin goles
A message to the IOC: Russians and Belarusians compete internationally without restrictions
There are no neutrals in the CIS multi-sport Games; all athletes represent their country, can take part in team events and win medals. Lukashenko, president of Belarus, described the sanctions as a “sign of weakness and fear” and spoke of “true Olympic ideals”.