Olympics
JAPAN MAY ALLOW NORTH KOREA ENTRY FOR TOKYO 2020 OLYMPICS
BY DANIEL ETCHELLS
The Japanese Government is set to
carry out a review over whether to allow North Korean athletes entry to the
Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games as an exception to the country’s
sanctions against the secretive state.

Japan’s Olympic Minister Yoshitaka Sakurada revealed the plan for a review during a lower house session.
“The Olympics and Paralympics is the world’s largest peace event, and it is desirable to have as many participants as possible,” he was reported as saying by Kyodo News.
Sakurada said the move “requires the understanding of all quarters”.
He added that he will work with the relevant Ministries and agencies to carefully deal with the matter.
Japan has banned North Korean nationals from entering the country as part of sanctions owing to Pyongyang’s development of missiles and nuclear weapons.
A total of 17 Japanese citizens are officially recognised by the country’s Government as having been abducted by agents of the North Korean Government during a period of six years from 1977 to 1983.
It is suspected that the actual number of victims is far higher, possibly numbering in the hundreds.
Relations between the two countries were further strained in 2017 when North Korean leader Kim Jong-un fired two ballistic missiles over Japanese territory as part of his country’s nuclear testing.
North Korean athletes are expected to participate at the Tokyo 2020 Games, while they are also set to join forces with South Korean competitors to form joint teams in three sports – women’s basketball, canoeing and rowing.
South Korea’s Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism Do Jong Hwan said in December that united teams could also be formed in table tennis, judo and “possibly other sports”.
Sakurada’s remarks today come after Tokyo 2020 organisers said yesterday it had given North Korea access to information on participation in next year’s Olympics and Paralympics.
The ID and password needed to access the private internet network used by organisers and National Olympic Committees since 2016 to share information had been withheld from the Olympic Committee of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK NOC).
“The North Korean NOC had been unable to use the special website due to technical problems, but we were able to resolve the problems,” Sakurada said.
Kyodo News reports that a negotiator for the DPRK NOC has said it had been asking for the ID and password since around September 2018.
The DPRK NOC claimed the incident is a “violation of the spirit of the Olympic Charter”.
It also said it was contemplating the possibility of lodging an official complaint to the International Olympic Committee (IOC).
In April, it was stated by Tokyo 2020 Coordination Commission chairman John Coates that the IOC would stay “politically neutral” towards North Korea’s involvement at the Games.
– INSDIE THE GAMES
Olympics
Condom Shortage Reported at Milano Cortina Winter Olympics on Valentine’s Day

Athletes at the Milano Cortina Winter Games have raced through their free condom supply ahead of Valentine’s Day, leaving dispensers empty on Saturday, with more than a week of competition remaining.
According to a report by Reuters, organisers had distributed around 10,000 condoms across the city and mountain accommodation sites, continuing a long-standing Olympic tradition aimed at promoting safe relationships among competitors living in close quarters.
By Saturday, however, supplies had run out — adding Milan to a growing list of Olympic hosts where demand has comfortably exceeded expectations.
“Clearly, this shows Valentine’s Day is in full swing at the village,” International Olympic Committee spokesman Mark Adams told a press conference. “Ten thousand have been used — 2,800 athletes — you can go figure, as they say.”
Adams added with a smile: “It is rule 62 of the Olympic Charter that we have to have a condoms story. Faster, higher, stronger, together.”
Milano Cortina organisers later acknowledged that stocks had been depleted due to “higher-than-anticipated demand,” but assured that additional supplies were already on the way.
“Additional supplies are being delivered and will be distributed across all Villages between today and Monday,” organisers said in a statement. “They will be continuously replenished until the end of the Games to ensure continued availability.”
The unexpected shortage also surprised some athletes.
Mexican figure skater Donovan Carrillo said he had only just heard about the situation. “I just saw that this morning. I was, like, shocked as everyone else,” he said.
Mialitiana Clerc, an alpine skier representing Madagascar, noted that boxes once placed at building entrances were quickly emptied.
“There were a lot of boxes at the entrance of every building where we were staying, and every day, everything had gone from the boxes,” Clerc said. “I already know that a lot of people are using condoms, or giving them to their friends outside of the Olympics, because it’s a kind of gift for them.”
While medals remain the official measure of achievement at the Games, the empty dispensers suggest that the social side of the Olympics is also proceeding at full pace.
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Olympics
Ukraine’s Zelenskiy thanks disqualified Olympian for being ‘who you are’

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Friday awarded a top state honour to an Olympic skeleton racer who was disqualified from the Winter Games for wearing a helmet commemorating athletes killed in the war with Russia.
Zelenskiy, speaking to Vladyslav Heraskevych on the sidelines of the annual Munich Security Conference, said he had great respect for “all the Olympians who supported you and your position.”
“Medals are important for Ukraine and for you, but it seems to me that the most important thing is who you are,” Zelenskiy said while presenting the racer with the Order of Freedom.
Heraskevych told the president the award was “huge” and that the athletes depicted on the helmet “deserve it even more. Because of their sacrifice, we can compete in the Olympics.”
Heraskevych, 27, was disqualified at the Winter Games in Italy on Thursday when the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation jury ruled that the helmet’s depiction of athletes killed since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 breached rules on political neutrality.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport dismissed his appeal on Friday.
Heraskevych told reporters after the award ceremony that his disqualification was discriminatory as he had not violated the Olympic Charter, a document he said he “really valued.”
“But at the same time, I understand that this scandal has united people around the world about our problem and about the sacrifice of these great athletes, and I believe this goal is much more important than any medal,” he said.
Speaking before the CAS hearing earlier in the day, Heraskevych said his exclusion and rules imposed by the International Olympic Committee were “an instrument of propaganda for Russia. I still receive a lot of threats from the Russian side.”
-Reuters
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Olympics
Ukraine’s Heraskevych disqualified over ‘helmet of remembrance’

Ukraine’s skeleton racer Vladyslav Heraskevych was disqualified from the Milano Cortina Winter Games on Thursday over the use of a helmet depicting Ukrainian athletes killed in the war with Russia, the International Olympic Committee said.
He was informed of his disqualification after a meeting with IOC President Kirsty Coventry early in the morning at the sliding venue.
His team said they would appeal the decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Coventry told reporters she had wanted to meet the athlete face to face in a last-ditch effort to break the impasse.
“I was not meant to be here but I thought it was really important to come here and talk to him face to face,” Coventry told reporters.
“No one, especially me, is disagreeing with the messaging, it’s a powerful message, it’s a message of remembrance, of memory.
“The challenge was to find a solution for the field of play. Sadly we’ve not been able to find that solution” she added, choking up.
“I really wanted to see him race, It’s been an emotional morning.”
The IOC offered him the opportunity to display his “helmet of remembrance” depicting 24 images of dead compatriots before the start and after the end of Thursday’s race at the Games, while also allowing him to wear a black armband while competing.
“I am disqualified from the race. I will not get my Olympic moment,” said Heraskevych.
The skeleton competition starts later on Thursday.
-Reuters
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