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World Aquatics allows flag, anthem for Russian athletes

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The governing body for international swimming and aquatic sports will allow athletes from Russia to compete without restrictions and with their national flag and anthem.

The decision marks a major shift in how a key sport treats Russia ahead of the Los Angeles Olympics in 2028.

World Aquatics said Monday it will remove restrictions which had required Russian and Belarusian athletes to be vetted and to compete under neutral status.

“Senior athletes with Belarusian or Russian sport nationality will be permitted to compete in World Aquatics events in the same way as their counterparts representing other sport nationalities, with their respective uniforms, flags and anthems,” World Aquatics said in a statement. It had previously relaxed the rules for junior athletes.

World Aquatics oversees sports like swimming, diving and water polo and is an influential voice in the Olympic movement.

Its decision applies only to its own events like the world championships but could add momentum within the Olympic world for a full return of Russian athletes ahead of the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

“We are determined to ensure that pools and open water remain places where athletes from all nations can come together in peaceful competition,” World Aquatics president Husain Al Musallam said.

Russian Sports Minister Mikhail Degtyarev thanked Al Musallam “for his firm position on this issue” and said they’d discussed the issue together in January.

“It is very important that international sporting dialog is bearing fruit and enables the orderly restoration of sporting ties,” Degtyarev, who also heads the Russian Olympic Committee, wrote on the social media app Max.

Ukraine has previously objected to efforts to allow Russian athletes to return to competition. Last month it led boycotts of the Paralympic opening and closing ceremonies after Russians were allowed to compete under their national flag.

Ukraine’s men’s water polo team appeared Monday to be forfeiting a scheduled World Cup game against a team of Russians competing as “Neutral Athlete B” in Malta.

World Aquatics oversees sports like swimming, diving and water polo and is an influential voice in the Olympic movement. It says Russian and Belarusian athletes will have to undergo four anti-doping tests and “background checks” before competing after Monday’s decision. It wasn’t immediately clear what would be checked.

There was no immediate response from the International Olympic Committee.

The IOC recommended in December to remove restrictions on Russian and Belarusian athletes for international youth events and letting them compete under national flags. The IOC still kept its neutral requirements for senior competitions, and Russians and Belarusians were officially referred to as “Individual Neutral Athletes” at the Winter Olympics in February.

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