Olympic funding questioned by nine EU nations over Russia readmission

Nine European Union nations urge funding cuts for sports bodies including the International Olympic Committee over readmitting Russian athletes.

Save

Kirsty Coventry has been president of the International Olympic Committee since March 2005 [Denis Balibouse/Reuters]
By Reuters

Published On 14 Jul 202614 Jul 2026

Nine European nations have ‌asked the European Union to cut funding to sports bodies including ⁠the International Olympic ⁠Committee (IOC), that let Russian and Belarusian athletes return to competition, Estonia’s Ministry of Culture has said.

Addressed to European Commissioner for ⁠Intergenerational Fairness, Youth, Culture and Sport Glenn Micallef, the proposal targets major bodies including the IOC, World Aquatics and the International Fencing Federation (FIE).

Recommended Stories

list of 4 itemsend of list

The move marks ⁠the strongest collective push yet by EU member states to use the bloc’s financial leverage against international sports bodies over the return of Russian and Belarusian athletes, setting up a potential confrontation between European governments and the Olympic movement ahead of ‌the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

The IOC, World Aquatics and FIE did not immediately reply to requests for comment.

On July 7, the IOC executive board provisionally lifted its suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee and noted that previous restrictions on Russian athletes, enacted in response to Russia’s four-and-a-half-year war on Ukraine, were no longer applicable.

The nine European nations — Estonia, Denmark, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania and Sweden — ⁠have called for these governing bodies to be excluded from ⁠the EU’s Erasmus+ and other financial support programmes.

“Respect for human rights, the rule of law, and peaceful relations between nations are among the core principles underpinning international sport and the Olympic ⁠movement,” they wrote in the letter.

Advertisement

The nine nations said allowing Russian and Belarusian athletes back into competition ignores the ⁠reality of Ukrainian competitors, who are unable to ⁠train under equal conditions due to displacement, destruction of infrastructure, or enlistment in the armed forces.

“Any assertions that sport can be separated from politics ring hollow when thousands of innocent Ukrainians have ‌lost their lives and when sport continues to be instrumentalised by the Russian and Belarusian regimes,” the statement said.

In addition to stripping the sports bodies of ‌financial ‌support, the nine countries proposed limiting the involvement of noncompliant organisations in key European sports forums and EU-led development discussions.