2023 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Championships Antwerp, BEL
Women’s Artistic Gymnastics Technical Committee Report
2023 FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Championships Antwerp, BEL
Women’s Artistic Gymnastics Technical Committee Report
Ukrainian politician Рома Грищук posted this image on Facebook.
He’s not happy the International Olympic Committee decided to allow Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete at the 2024 Olympics in Paris under a neutral flag.
It may have been first posted by Visegrád 24 on Twitter.

From Worlds 2023 in Spain.
China
Italy
Ukraine
Brazil
France
related – 2023 in review: a year of curve balls and comebacks in Rhythmic Gymnastics
Zaurbek Sidakov, Zaur Uguev and Abdulrashid Sadulayev are 3 of the eight athletes already named as eligible by IOC.
Attending a war rally with Putin did not disqualify.
Article from September 19, 2023:
Three Olympic champions from Russia were cleared to compete at the world wrestling championships this week because they were judged to have been pressured to appear at a pro-war rally in Moscow last year.
The United World Wrestling governing body explained Tuesday why Zaurbek Sidakov, Zaur Uguev and Abdulrashid Sadulayev were among the Russian wrestlers who passed vetting to compete as neutral athletes in Belgrade, Serbia.
All three won Olympic gold medals at the Tokyo Games held in 2021 and were paraded on stage at a flag-waving rally at Luzhniki Stadium in March 2022. It was attended by President Vladimir Putin three weeks after he ordered the military invasion of Ukraine.
The athletes’ presence there seemed likely to bar their return to competition with neutral status ahead of the Paris Games. The International Olympic Committee advised the governing bodies of each individual sport in March to exclude those who publicly supported the war.
However, a vetting process for the three wrestlers concluded “their participation in certain events is not (of) their own will,” United World Wrestling said in a statement.
The governing body’s vetting panel did bar 30 athletes, coaches and support staff from Russia and its military ally Belarus from coming to the Sept. 16-24 championships. …
Wrestling body says why Russian champions competed at worlds despite pro-war rally
After dragging their feet for as long as possible, the IOC made it official.
Still, it’s unlikely any in Gymnastics sports will be able to qualify. Valentina Rodionenko said the coaches of the National Team had decided they didn’t want to try for Paris under these restrictions.
“The executive board of the IOC has decided that individual neutral athletes (AINs) who have qualified through the existing qualification systems of the International Federations on the field of play will be declared eligible to compete at the Olympic Games Paris 2024 in accordance with the conditions outlined,” the Olympic body said on Friday. …
… six “strict eligibility conditions” for AINs at Paris 2024 reflecting the same conditions under which they have qualified.
It said among the 4,600 athletes who have so far qualified for the Games, only 11 were AINs – eight with a Russian passport, three with a Belarusian passport.
BBC – Paris 2024 Olympics: Russian and Belarusian athletes allowed to compete as neutrals
The conditions for their participation are as follows:

Dictator Putin invaded Ukraine
With no end in sight after more than 21 months of war, the number of people killed in the hundreds of thousands, intelligence estimates suggest.
It’s a mistake to allow any Russian athletes to compete Paris, in my opinion.
23 September – 7 October 2027
A proven host, Chengdu did a good job hosting the 31st FISU Summer World University Games in 2023.

Kensley is updating a dedicated page on her NeutralDeductions.com website.
Click the PARIS tab to see where we stand right now. And ongoing as names are added in 2024.

The General Assembly of European Gymnastics has voted against allowing athletes and officials from Russia and Belarus to return to official European Gymnastics competitions from 1 January 2024 onwards, thus not following the FIG decision.
This begs the question whether it’s feasible for RUS athletes to compete in Europe at FIG World Cup qualifying meets.