World Athletics approves 6 more Russians to compete as neutral athletes

Six more Russians have been cleared by World Athletics to compete internationally as neutral athletes, but they remain frozen out as their country is still banned from the sport following Russia's invasion of Ukraine a year ago.

Country remains barred from track and field competition after Ukraine invasion

Russian skating fan holds the country's national flag over the Olympic rings.
Six Russians on Monday were cleared by World Athletics to compete internationally as neutral athletes. But the governing body has separately banned all athletes and officials from Russia and Belarus, including neutrals, from competing at international events while the war in Ukraine continues, meaning they wouldn't be eligible to qualify for the 2024 Paris Olympics. (David J. Phillip/Associated Press/File)

Six more Russians have been cleared by World Athletics to compete internationally as neutral athletes, but they remain frozen out as their country is still banned from the sport following Russia's invasion of Ukraine a year ago.

The Russian Athletics Federation has been suspended since 2015 as a result of widespread doping and a state-sponsored cover-up, though a number of athletes have been allowed to compete as neutrals if they could show a "clean record" that also disassociates them from the tainted system.

Nikita Anishchenkov (high jump), Artem Chermoshanskiy (long jump), Maksim Pianzin (race walking), Nikita Kurbanov (high jump, Danil Chechela (long jump), Marina Kovaleva (long distance) are the latest to meet the exceptional eligibility criteria and were approved by the Doping Review Board, WA said on Monday.

However, the sport's governing body has separately banned all athletes and officials from Russia and Belarus, including those authorized as neutrals, from taking part in international events while the war in Ukraine continues.

That means track and field athletes would not be eligible to qualify for the 2024 Olympics in Paris, despite the International Olympic Committee saying it welcomed a proposal from the Olympic Council of Asia for Russian and Belarusian sportsmen and women to earn qualification spots through competitions in Asia.

That suggestion was greeted by outrage in Ukraine, where President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said allowing Russia to compete in the Olympics would be tantamount to showing that "terror is somehow acceptable."

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