What does AIN mean at the Paris Olympics?
A limited number of Russian and Belarusian athletes will compete at Paris 2024
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Andrew Feinberg
White House Correspondent
The small number of Russian and Belarusian athletes will compete under a new banner at Paris 2024 with the Olympic committees of both nations banned from the Games.
At the Olympics, they will compete under a tag of “AIN” — the initialism stands for Athlete Individuel Neutre, French for individual neutral athlete with AIN both the acronym and IOC country code. A teal flag has been designed to be raised at a medal ceremony if required.
The IOC has also produced an independent anthem, with no lyrics, to be played for any Russian or Belarusian gold medal winners. They will also not be involved in the opening ceremony.
Among the highest profile athletes competing from the two nations are Russian tennis player Daniil Medvedev, winner of the US Open in 2021, and Belarus’ defending trampoline champion Ivan Litvinovich.
This is the fourth Games in a row that entrants from Russia have not been allowed to compete under their own flag, though their ban for widespread doping violations has now ended.
The absence of the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) from this Olympics instead comes because of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) condemned the act at the time, saying that the Olympic Truce had been breached and forbidding athletes from Russia and Belarus, a close ally of Vladimir Putin’s government, from competing.
No state officials from either nation will be welcome at the Games. The ROC has been suspended from the IOC, with the suspension upheld after an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport earlier this year.
However, a number of Russian and Belarusian athletes will still compete in the French capital. The suspension does not prevent an individual athlete from competing, with the IOC giving individual sports the ability to decide whether they allow them to compete as neutrals provided they meet eligibility criteria set.
Some sports, like athletics, have imposed a blanket ban on Russians and Belarusians since the invasion.
The number of entrants from the two nations in other sports will be greatly reduced from the last Olympics. The ROC fielded 335 athletes in Tokyo, but just 16 are currently scheduled to compete in Paris. A number of athletes have turned down invitations to compete under a neutral flag. The Belarusian contingent numbers 17 as things stand.
But their participation at all has been criticised. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accused the IOC of showing that “terror is somehow acceptable” in January of last year.
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