ATHLETES PUT POLITICS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
By Alex Capstick - BBC sports news reporter.
Team Darfur is the brainchild of speed skater Joey Cheek . A growing number of athletes from all over the world have signed up to Team Darfur, an organisation committed to raising awareness about the crisis in the troubled region of Sudan.
It wants to put pressure on the Sudanese authorities, and also those countries, like China, that support inaction against the regime.
Team Darfur plans to highlight the issue at the Beijing Olympics.
But athletes have been warned to steer clear of protests during the Games. Article 51 of the Olympic charter clearly forbids any sort of demonstration or political propaganda at Olympic sites and venues.
Canada's former Olympic swimmer Nicky Dryden, a Team Darfur campaigner, wants athletes to make a stand during the Beijing Games.
She said she hoped successful athletes in the spotlight "can take the opportunity, when for the one time in their life the media will be focused on them... to talk about the things that make them proud to be Olympians".
"And I think those are the fact that the Olympics are based on the value of human rights and human dignity - and that perhaps that's not happening in China, within its own borders, and [in] its interaction with the Sudanese government," she added.
Team Darfur is the brainchild of the American speed skater Joey Cheek.
The IOC is accused of hypocrisy for its stance on political protests.
After clinching the 500m gold medal at the Winter Olympics in Turin two years ago, he used his news conference to talk about Darfur.
He hopes successful athletes in Beijing display a similar disregard for the rules.
"I would love to have several hundred more athletes in Team Darfur by Beijing and I see no reason why we can’t recruit a few hundred more," the Times newspaper quotes him as saying.
"So much of the Olympic charter is about brotherhood and achieving something greater through sport; it's pretty lofty language. It seems hypocritical for people within the Olympic movement to say 'We believe in human rights' and then take no action."
The possibility of political demonstrations has so concerned the British Olympic Association, that it inserted a strongly worded clause in its contract for Beijing-bound athletes, in which they agree not to make such protests.
Team Darfur is the brainchild of speed skater Joey Cheek . A growing number of athletes from all over the world have signed up to Team Darfur, an organisation committed to raising awareness about the crisis in the troubled region of Sudan.
It wants to put pressure on the Sudanese authorities, and also those countries, like China, that support inaction against the regime.
Team Darfur plans to highlight the issue at the Beijing Olympics.
But athletes have been warned to steer clear of protests during the Games. Article 51 of the Olympic charter clearly forbids any sort of demonstration or political propaganda at Olympic sites and venues.
Canada's former Olympic swimmer Nicky Dryden, a Team Darfur campaigner, wants athletes to make a stand during the Beijing Games.
She said she hoped successful athletes in the spotlight "can take the opportunity, when for the one time in their life the media will be focused on them... to talk about the things that make them proud to be Olympians".
"And I think those are the fact that the Olympics are based on the value of human rights and human dignity - and that perhaps that's not happening in China, within its own borders, and [in] its interaction with the Sudanese government," she added.
Team Darfur is the brainchild of the American speed skater Joey Cheek.
The IOC is accused of hypocrisy for its stance on political protests.
After clinching the 500m gold medal at the Winter Olympics in Turin two years ago, he used his news conference to talk about Darfur.
He hopes successful athletes in Beijing display a similar disregard for the rules.
"I would love to have several hundred more athletes in Team Darfur by Beijing and I see no reason why we can’t recruit a few hundred more," the Times newspaper quotes him as saying.
"So much of the Olympic charter is about brotherhood and achieving something greater through sport; it's pretty lofty language. It seems hypocritical for people within the Olympic movement to say 'We believe in human rights' and then take no action."
The possibility of political demonstrations has so concerned the British Olympic Association, that it inserted a strongly worded clause in its contract for Beijing-bound athletes, in which they agree not to make such protests.
Richard Vaughan, a medal contender in badminton and a member of Team Darfur, accused the BOA of using "bullying" tactics, and sees no reason why people should not talk about Darfur.
"Darfur is a humanitarian issue, not really a political one. I think gagging athletes is the wrong way to go about it," he said.
British Olympic officials have agreed to soften the wording, insisting it is not a gagging order, and that it merely reflects what is already written in the Olympic charter.
A spokesperson for the International Olympic Committee has confirmed that action will be taken against anyone who contravenes its rules. In the past it has been done on a case-by-case basis.
The best known protest was at the Mexico Games in 1968 when the black American sprinters Tommy Smith and John Carlos raised their gloved fists during the 200m award ceremony in support of the civil rights movement.
BBC NEWS REPORT.
A spokesperson for the International Olympic Committee has confirmed that action will be taken against anyone who contravenes its rules. In the past it has been done on a case-by-case basis.
The best known protest was at the Mexico Games in 1968 when the black American sprinters Tommy Smith and John Carlos raised their gloved fists during the 200m award ceremony in support of the civil rights movement.
BBC NEWS REPORT.
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