Athletes funded by Russia are not 'neutral' says Ukrainian Olympian
Ukrainian skeleton athlete and flag bearer Vladyslav Heraskevych has criticsed the International Olympic Committee's policy for Russian and Belarusian athletes.
Olympians from those nations will compete as neutral athletes.
But Heraskevych questions "how you can consider an athlete neutral if he is fully financed by the government, if he is somehow attached to the federation, national federation, which is also part of propaganda”.
He says athletes who have fled Russia or Belarus and opposed the war should instead be allowed to compete under a refugee banner.
"I'm not against athletes themselves," he said. "I'm against the spreading of propaganda. And I believe that verification system, verification criteria are not enough to [vet the athletes] as neutral."
Heraskevych - who flashed a ‘NO WAR IN UKRAINE' sign at the Beijing Winter Games days before Russia’s 2022 invasion - wants to see change. He is unhappy that some athletes are "getting ready for competition in occupied territories" and says they shouldn't be considered neutral if they are benefiting from government funding.
"It should be a refugee team, so they should be separated from the government. They shouldn't have any monetary ties to the Russian government, to the Belarussian government."