schema:articleBody
| - Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko on Tuesday threatened to take the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to court for banning him from Olympic events over athlete discrimination. Olympic chiefs on Monday cracked down on the Belarus National Olympic Committee (NOC), headed by Lukashenko, for targeting athletes over their political views. Since Lukashenko's disputed re-election to a sixth term in August, Belarus has been in the throes of its most serious political crisis in modern history, with protesters taking to the streets and authorities cracking down on the opposition. A number of prominent Belarusian athletes have supported Lukashenko's critics and demanded an end to the crackdown. Speaking on Tuesday, Lukashenko threatened to sue IOC President Thomas Bach and other top officials. "We need to go to court. Let Bach and the gang explain what my fault is," Lukashenko said in remarks released by his office. "I haven't taken part in these events for 25 years and will survive in the future. But have you gathered all the countries and made a decision? Ok I will survive, but why are you involving children?". Lukashenko's son Viktor, 45, is the first vice-president of the NOC. It was unclear which events the Belarusian leader was referring to and he is documented as having attended Olympic Games in Nagano in 1998, Beijing in 2008 and Sochi in 2014. The Belarus NOC on Tuesday described the ban as "biased" and said politics should not be allowed to interfere in sports. "We view this decision as politically motivated, aimed at putting pressure on the leadership of the Belarusian NOC," it said in a statement. The IOC in October launched an investigation into claims by Belarusian athletes who said they were being discriminated against by the country's authorities for their political views. A number of prominent athletes signed a petition demanding an end to violence and new elections. Among them was two-time Olympic basketball player Yelena Leuchanka, who was detained in September while trying to leave the country and jailed for two weeks over the protests. The international Olympic body said Monday that the NOC had not done enough to protect athletes from "political discrimination". The IOC will also suspend "all financial payments to the NOC, with the exception of payments related to the preparations of the Belarusian athletes for, and their participation in, the Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympic Games and the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games". It asked international sporting federations to "make sure that all eligible Belarusian athletes can take part in qualification events for the upcoming Olympic Games without any political discrimination". tk-acl/jbr/dmc
|