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International Olympic Committee seeks answers about Russia’s anti-gay law

0,,16585280_303,00From DW.DE

The International Olympic Committee has asked Russian officials for clarifications over a controversial anti-gay law in the run-up to the 2014 Sochi Winter Games. The committee wants answers before passing judgment.

IOC President Jacques Rogge said on Friday that the committee had received assurances from Sochi organizers with regard to the law in question but that there were still some outstanding issues.

0,,16638951_404,00“There are still uncertainties. We have asked for further clarification before making a decision. We are not clear about the English translation of the Russian law,” Rogge said.

“The Games must be open free of discrimination,” he added.

Legal questions

A federal law adopted by Russia in June bans “propaganda” of “nontraditional sexual orientation” to minors and stipulates that foreigners can be arrested and deported if convicted. It also calls for fines to be imposed on those holding gay pride rallies.

0,,16836220_303,00The bill has sparked international outrage, with activists calling for a boycott of the 2014 Sochi Winter Games.

The Russian sports minister, Vitaly Mutko, has insisted the law would be enforced during the 2014 Winter Games, scheduled for February 7-23. He went so far as to snub Western criticism.

“We don’t have to be afraid of threats to boycott the Olympic Games,” Mutko said. “All sensible people understand that sports demand independence, that it is inadmissible that politics intervene.”

0,,16991909_401,00Mutko has acknowledged, however, that the private lives of athletes would be respected, as guaranteed by Russia’s constitution.

Rogge commented that such respect for the athletes was essential, but he also noted concern over the athletes’ right to freedom of expression. It is unclear whether athletes can speak freely on the issue whilst in Russia.

“We cannot make a comment on the law” until the clarifications have been received, Rogge said.

Rogge’s statements were made after the traditional joint meeting of the IOC executive board and the council of the ruling athletics body IAAF just before the launch of the athletics World Championships in Moscow from August 10-18.

Fair to the athletes

US President Barack Obama also commented on the Russian law during a press conference in the White House on Friday, saying that it would be wrong to boycott the Olympic Games.

Obama explained that he was offended by the law but noted that it wouldn’t be fair to deny American athletes who have been training hard their chance to compete.

For more on this story go to:

http://www.dw.de/international-olympic-committee-seeks-answers-about-russias-anti-gay-law/a-17010907

Related story:

‘Boycotting Sochi would only hurt the athletes’

Russia’s new anti-gay propaganda law has led to calls for a boycott of the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in the Black Sea resort Sochi. German Green Party politician Volker Beck tells DW why that wouldn’t be a good idea.

DW: The Kremlin has reacted with “disappointment” to western criticism of its recently implemented anti-gay propaganda law, adding that its laws are “quite liberal.” How do you see this?

Volker Beck: First off we must say that in Russia it is not against the law to be gay. It’s been that way since the beginning of the 1990s, and this pledge of tolerance was one of the requirements for Russia’s acceptance into the Council of Europe and its signing of the European Convention on Human Rights.

But with the implementation of this propaganda law, all civil and political rights of homosexuals have now been essentially abrogated. Insofar as this law prohibits people from expressing themselves in support of homosexuality, we can’t exactly speak of any “liberal” legislative situation in Russia.

Of course, if you compare it with countries like Iran and Sudan, Russia is of course more liberal when it comes to homosexuality. But in reality it is a country in which citizens – including gays and lesbians – have had their personal freedoms clearly infringed upon.

Beck is the Bundestag’s human rights spokesman

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) recently said that the anti-gay propaganda law would be suspended during the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi. But in response Russia’s Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko rejected any such willingness, claiming that “all rights would be protected” under the law. What do you think will happen?

It is certainly quite strange for any normal state to suspend or invalidate its laws to appease the representatives of international events. But let’s face it: Russia is not a normal state. Ultimately it’s the Kremlin that has the control over policing authorities and the judiciary, and this is the way Putin wants it.

But in my opinion it is also quite clear that no spectator should have to fear persecution because he or she is carrying a rainbow flag or endorsing the freedom of gays and lesbians. Otherwise these Olympic Games won’t be secure, and then it’s no longer an issue of simply boycotting the event. If Russia isn’t prepared to guarantee security, then I expect the IOC to move the event to somewhere that can.

Would a boycott of the Sochi Games – as several high-ranking German politicians are now considering openly – really be a good idea? Wouldn’t this harm more than it would heal?

When Sochi was chosen as the host of the 2014 Winter Games, we can safely say people knew about the nature of democracy in Russia. The only new development is this anti-propaganda law. We were aware that there is no democracy in Russia; that there’s no real rule of law; that the opposition is oppressed; that human rights activists, lawyers and journalists are thrown in jail if they criticize the government.

We knew all of this before.

The mistake made here was to choose Sochi as a host to begin with. We can’t act surprised now. Putin’s Russia is what Putin’s Russia is. To boycott the event, to force the athletes to forego the competitions, would be to punish the people who have been training for years – in some cases their whole lives.

Fears have risen that fans could be punished for endorsing homosexuality

This is why we must demand that the Games be hosted elsewhere if Russia cannot provide the necessary security. And in the future, we ask that the IOC and other organizations learn from this and see that there’s no sense in holding major events in dictatorships, because the people in power simply use these events as PR-shows and to oppress the opposition even more.

We saw it in China in 2008, and we’re seeing the same thing again in Russia. Perhaps we could make note of this at some point.

Volker Beck is a member of the Green Party and has been in the Bundestag since 1994. He is currently the human rights spokesperson for the Bundestag and focuses on advancing civil rights for gays and lesbians.

For more on this story go to:

http://www.dw.de/boycotting-sochi-would-only-hurt-the-athletes/a-17009743

 

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