Commonwealth Games 2022: Banning Northern Irish gymnasts ‘contravenes Good Friday Agreement’
Politicians in Northern Ireland have united behind calls for three banned gymnasts to be allowed to compete at the Commonwealth Games, saying the decision by the International Gymnastics Federation (FIG) contravenes the Good Friday Agreement.
The FIG ruled that the trio – Eamon Montgomery, Ewan McAteer and reigning Commonwealth pommelhorse gold medallist Rhys McClenaghan – could not compete for Northern Ireland at this summer’s Games in Birmingham because they had previously represented Ireland in competition.
The Good Friday Agreement states that citizens of Northern Ireland should be free to choose whether their identity is British, Irish or both – a principal widely upheld across elite sport.
Montgomery, who won World Cup bronze in the floor discipline in April, recently told the Belfast Telegraph he would be “heartbroken” to miss the Commonwealths, while McClenaghan tweeted: “My personal identity is in a very difficult place right now.”
In a letter addressed to the FIG president Morinari Watanabe, signed by 81 of the 90 members of the Northern Ireland Assembly, politicians from all sides called for Watanabe to overturn the ban.
I would thank all 81 of the Assembly Members for their support in this current situation. I hope @gymnastics can see the importance of the Belfast Agreement and the negative effects of their decision. pic.twitter.com/D735BUGmGC
“We write to protest against your decision,” the letter read. “Your decision runs against custom and practice in many sports, which permit sportspeople from Northern Ireland to represent variously Northern Ireland, Ireland or Great Britain & Northern Ireland.
“It also contravenes the Belfast Good Friday Agreement, an internationally binding treaty, which enshrines


