Russian and Belarusian flags to return at 2026 Paralympics
russia today -

The International Paralympic Committee has awarded six qualification slots and additional wildcard entries to competitors from the two countries

Russian athletes will compete under their national flag at the Paralympic Winter Games for the first time since 2014, after the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) granted limited slots to athletes from Russia and Belarus for the Milano Cortina 2026 event.

Russian and Belarusian athletes have been barred from most international competitions since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022. While some were later allowed to compete under neutral flags, the International Paralympic Committee in September approved disabled Russian athletes to compete under their national flag at the 2026 Games.

The IPC told news agencies AFP and SID on Tuesday it had awarded six quota places to Russia’s National Paralympic Committee and a total of ten wildcard entries to athletes from Russia and Belarus for the March 6-15 Games in Italy. The governing body said the selected athletes would be permitted to compete under their national flags.

The athletes would be “treated like [those from] any other country,” the IPC told reporters.

The IPC confirmed to the BBC that the ten athletes had been granted bipartite commission invitations to compete in Para-alpine skiing, Para cross-country skiing and Para-snowboarding at the Milano Cortina Games.

“The IPC can confirm that NPC Russia has been awarded a total of six slots: two in Para-alpine skiing (one male, one female), two in Para-cross country skiing (one male, one female), and two in Para-snowboard (both male),” it said in a statement. Belarus has been granted four slots “all in cross-country skiing,” the committee added.

In December, Russia and Belarus won an appeal against International Ski Federation at the Court of Arbitration for Sport, allowing their athletes to compete and earn ranking points.

However, the four international federations in charge of the six sports on the Paralympic program have opted to maintain their bans on Russian and Belarusian athletes.

Moscow has accused Western nations of pressuring federations to ban Russian athletes for political reasons, criticizing international sports bodies for “politicizing” sports. Last year, President Vladimir Putin said athletes should have equal access based on merit, stressing that “politics has no place in sport.”

Despite the restrictions, Russian athletes, including para-athletes, have continued to post strong results. The Russian team secured eight medals at the Para Cross-Country World Cup in Finsterau, Germany, and added six more at the Para Alpine World Cup in Austria.

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