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COC head says Russian, Belarusian athletes must oppose Ukraine war to participate in Olympics

On the one-year anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the head of the Canadian Olympic Committee maintains there is no place for Russian and Belarusian athletes at next summer's Olympic Games in Paris, but acknowledges the emerging reality that it may happen.

If it does, David Shoemaker wants strong conditions, including affected athletes publicly denouncing the war.

"If there's some way of having exemptions for those athletes who can prove to us that they're opposed to the war, we'd be willing to consider what the international community has in mind," David Shoemaker told CBC Sports.

The prospect of a complete ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes shifted last month when the International Olympic Committee laid out a path for Russian and Belarusian athletes to qualify and compete as neutral athletes with no flags or anthems.

"No athlete should be prevented from competing just because of their passport," the IOC's executive board said in a statement on Jan. 25.

Since the war began Feb. 24, 2022, Shoemaker and the COC have been adamant that athletes from Russia and Belarus be banned from participating in international sporting events.

"Nothing has changed for the positive to make us reconsider this view," Shoemaker said.

Shoemaker said maintaining an outright ban on a nation that has repeatedly flouted international and Olympic rules continues to be the COC's preference. At the same time he acknowledged that Russian participation is possible and that Canada and the rest of the world must find the most palatable way forward.

"As a society we seem to have accepted that there's such a thing as innocent athletes from Russia. Tennis players competing at the Australian Open. Nearly 200 NHL players participate and

Read more on cbc.ca